llvm-project/llvm/lib/Transforms/Scalar/SROA.cpp

4292 lines
166 KiB
C++
Raw Normal View History

Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
//===- SROA.cpp - Scalar Replacement Of Aggregates ------------------------===//
//
// The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
//
// This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source
// License. See LICENSE.TXT for details.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
/// \file
/// This transformation implements the well known scalar replacement of
/// aggregates transformation. It tries to identify promotable elements of an
/// aggregate alloca, and promote them to registers. It will also try to
/// convert uses of an element (or set of elements) of an alloca into a vector
/// or bitfield-style integer scalar if appropriate.
///
/// It works to do this with minimal slicing of the alloca so that regions
/// which are merely transferred in and out of external memory remain unchanged
/// and are not decomposed to scalar code.
///
/// Because this also performs alloca promotion, it can be thought of as also
/// serving the purpose of SSA formation. The algorithm iterates on the
/// function until all opportunities for promotion have been realized.
///
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
[PM] Port SROA to the new pass manager. In some ways this is a very boring port to the new pass manager as there are no interesting analyses or dependencies or other oddities. However, this does introduce the first good example of a transformation pass with non-trivial state porting to the new pass manager. I've tried to carve out patterns here to replicate elsewhere, and would appreciate comments on whether folks like these patterns: - A common need in the new pass manager is to effectively lift the pass class and some of its state into a public header file. Prior to this, LLVM used anonymous namespaces to provide "module private" types and utilities, but that doesn't scale to cases where a public header file is needed and the new pass manager will exacerbate that. The pattern I've adopted here is to use the namespace-cased-name of the core pass (what would be a module if we had them) as a module-private namespace. Then utility and other code can be declared and defined in this namespace. At some point in the future, we could even have (conditionally compiled) code that used modules features when available to do the same basic thing. - I've split the actual pass run method in two in order to expose a private method usable by the old pass manager to wrap the new class with a minimum of duplicated code. I actually looked at a bunch of ways to automate or generate these, but they are all quite terrible IMO. The fundamental need is to extract the set of analyses which need to cross this interface boundary, and that will end up being too unpredictable to effectively encapsulate IMO. This is also a relatively small amount of boiler plate that will live a relatively short time, so I'm not too worried about the fact that it is boiler plate. The rest of the patch is totally boring but results in a massive diff (sorry). It just moves code around and removes or adds qualifiers to reflect the new name and nesting structure. Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12773 llvm-svn: 247501
2015-09-12 17:09:14 +08:00
#include "llvm/Transforms/Scalar/SROA.h"
#include "llvm/ADT/STLExtras.h"
#include "llvm/ADT/SmallVector.h"
#include "llvm/ADT/Statistic.h"
#include "llvm/Analysis/AssumptionCache.h"
[PM] Port SROA to the new pass manager. In some ways this is a very boring port to the new pass manager as there are no interesting analyses or dependencies or other oddities. However, this does introduce the first good example of a transformation pass with non-trivial state porting to the new pass manager. I've tried to carve out patterns here to replicate elsewhere, and would appreciate comments on whether folks like these patterns: - A common need in the new pass manager is to effectively lift the pass class and some of its state into a public header file. Prior to this, LLVM used anonymous namespaces to provide "module private" types and utilities, but that doesn't scale to cases where a public header file is needed and the new pass manager will exacerbate that. The pattern I've adopted here is to use the namespace-cased-name of the core pass (what would be a module if we had them) as a module-private namespace. Then utility and other code can be declared and defined in this namespace. At some point in the future, we could even have (conditionally compiled) code that used modules features when available to do the same basic thing. - I've split the actual pass run method in two in order to expose a private method usable by the old pass manager to wrap the new class with a minimum of duplicated code. I actually looked at a bunch of ways to automate or generate these, but they are all quite terrible IMO. The fundamental need is to extract the set of analyses which need to cross this interface boundary, and that will end up being too unpredictable to effectively encapsulate IMO. This is also a relatively small amount of boiler plate that will live a relatively short time, so I'm not too worried about the fact that it is boiler plate. The rest of the patch is totally boring but results in a massive diff (sorry). It just moves code around and removes or adds qualifiers to reflect the new name and nesting structure. Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12773 llvm-svn: 247501
2015-09-12 17:09:14 +08:00
#include "llvm/Analysis/GlobalsModRef.h"
#include "llvm/Analysis/Loads.h"
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
#include "llvm/Analysis/PtrUseVisitor.h"
#include "llvm/Analysis/ValueTracking.h"
#include "llvm/IR/Constants.h"
#include "llvm/IR/DIBuilder.h"
#include "llvm/IR/DataLayout.h"
#include "llvm/IR/DebugInfo.h"
#include "llvm/IR/DerivedTypes.h"
#include "llvm/IR/IRBuilder.h"
#include "llvm/IR/InstVisitor.h"
#include "llvm/IR/Instructions.h"
#include "llvm/IR/IntrinsicInst.h"
#include "llvm/IR/LLVMContext.h"
#include "llvm/IR/Operator.h"
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
#include "llvm/Pass.h"
Port the SSAUpdater-based promotion logic from the old SROA pass to the new one, and add support for running the new pass in that mode and in that slot of the pass manager. With this the new pass can completely replace the old one within the pipeline. The strategy for enabling or disabling the SSAUpdater logic is to do it by making the requirement of the domtree analysis optional. By default, it is required and we get the standard mem2reg approach. This is usually the desired strategy when run in stand-alone situations. Within the CGSCC pass manager, we disable requiring of the domtree analysis and consequentially trigger fallback to the SSAUpdater promotion. In theory this would allow the pass to re-use a domtree if one happened to be available even when run in a mode that doesn't require it. In practice, it lets us have a single pass rather than two which was simpler for me to wrap my head around. There is a hidden flag to force the use of the SSAUpdater code path for the purpose of testing. The primary testing strategy is just to run the existing tests through that path. One notable difference is that it has custom code to handle lifetime markers, and one of the tests has been enhanced to exercise that code. This has survived a bootstrap and the test suite without serious correctness issues, however my run of the test suite produced *very* alarming performance numbers. I don't entirely understand or trust them though, so more investigation is on-going. To aid my understanding of the performance impact of the new SROA now that it runs throughout the optimization pipeline, I'm enabling it by default in this commit, and will disable it again once the LNT bots have picked up one iteration with it. I want to get those bots (which are much more stable) to evaluate the impact of the change before I jump to any conclusions. NOTE: Several Clang tests will fail because they run -O3 and check the result's order of output. They'll go back to passing once I disable it again. llvm-svn: 163965
2012-09-15 19:43:14 +08:00
#include "llvm/Support/CommandLine.h"
#include "llvm/Support/Compiler.h"
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
#include "llvm/Support/Debug.h"
#include "llvm/Support/ErrorHandling.h"
#include "llvm/Support/MathExtras.h"
#include "llvm/Support/TimeValue.h"
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
#include "llvm/Support/raw_ostream.h"
[PM] Port SROA to the new pass manager. In some ways this is a very boring port to the new pass manager as there are no interesting analyses or dependencies or other oddities. However, this does introduce the first good example of a transformation pass with non-trivial state porting to the new pass manager. I've tried to carve out patterns here to replicate elsewhere, and would appreciate comments on whether folks like these patterns: - A common need in the new pass manager is to effectively lift the pass class and some of its state into a public header file. Prior to this, LLVM used anonymous namespaces to provide "module private" types and utilities, but that doesn't scale to cases where a public header file is needed and the new pass manager will exacerbate that. The pattern I've adopted here is to use the namespace-cased-name of the core pass (what would be a module if we had them) as a module-private namespace. Then utility and other code can be declared and defined in this namespace. At some point in the future, we could even have (conditionally compiled) code that used modules features when available to do the same basic thing. - I've split the actual pass run method in two in order to expose a private method usable by the old pass manager to wrap the new class with a minimum of duplicated code. I actually looked at a bunch of ways to automate or generate these, but they are all quite terrible IMO. The fundamental need is to extract the set of analyses which need to cross this interface boundary, and that will end up being too unpredictable to effectively encapsulate IMO. This is also a relatively small amount of boiler plate that will live a relatively short time, so I'm not too worried about the fact that it is boiler plate. The rest of the patch is totally boring but results in a massive diff (sorry). It just moves code around and removes or adds qualifiers to reflect the new name and nesting structure. Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12773 llvm-svn: 247501
2015-09-12 17:09:14 +08:00
#include "llvm/Transforms/Scalar.h"
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
#include "llvm/Transforms/Utils/Local.h"
#include "llvm/Transforms/Utils/PromoteMemToReg.h"
#if __cplusplus >= 201103L && !defined(NDEBUG)
// We only use this for a debug check in C++11
#include <random>
#endif
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
using namespace llvm;
[PM] Port SROA to the new pass manager. In some ways this is a very boring port to the new pass manager as there are no interesting analyses or dependencies or other oddities. However, this does introduce the first good example of a transformation pass with non-trivial state porting to the new pass manager. I've tried to carve out patterns here to replicate elsewhere, and would appreciate comments on whether folks like these patterns: - A common need in the new pass manager is to effectively lift the pass class and some of its state into a public header file. Prior to this, LLVM used anonymous namespaces to provide "module private" types and utilities, but that doesn't scale to cases where a public header file is needed and the new pass manager will exacerbate that. The pattern I've adopted here is to use the namespace-cased-name of the core pass (what would be a module if we had them) as a module-private namespace. Then utility and other code can be declared and defined in this namespace. At some point in the future, we could even have (conditionally compiled) code that used modules features when available to do the same basic thing. - I've split the actual pass run method in two in order to expose a private method usable by the old pass manager to wrap the new class with a minimum of duplicated code. I actually looked at a bunch of ways to automate or generate these, but they are all quite terrible IMO. The fundamental need is to extract the set of analyses which need to cross this interface boundary, and that will end up being too unpredictable to effectively encapsulate IMO. This is also a relatively small amount of boiler plate that will live a relatively short time, so I'm not too worried about the fact that it is boiler plate. The rest of the patch is totally boring but results in a massive diff (sorry). It just moves code around and removes or adds qualifiers to reflect the new name and nesting structure. Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12773 llvm-svn: 247501
2015-09-12 17:09:14 +08:00
using namespace llvm::sroa;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
#define DEBUG_TYPE "sroa"
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
STATISTIC(NumAllocasAnalyzed, "Number of allocas analyzed for replacement");
STATISTIC(NumAllocaPartitions, "Number of alloca partitions formed");
STATISTIC(MaxPartitionsPerAlloca, "Maximum number of partitions per alloca");
STATISTIC(NumAllocaPartitionUses, "Number of alloca partition uses rewritten");
STATISTIC(MaxUsesPerAllocaPartition, "Maximum number of uses of a partition");
STATISTIC(NumNewAllocas, "Number of new, smaller allocas introduced");
STATISTIC(NumPromoted, "Number of allocas promoted to SSA values");
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
STATISTIC(NumLoadsSpeculated, "Number of loads speculated to allow promotion");
STATISTIC(NumDeleted, "Number of instructions deleted");
STATISTIC(NumVectorized, "Number of vectorized aggregates");
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
/// Hidden option to enable randomly shuffling the slices to help uncover
/// instability in their order.
static cl::opt<bool> SROARandomShuffleSlices("sroa-random-shuffle-slices",
cl::init(false), cl::Hidden);
/// Hidden option to experiment with completely strict handling of inbounds
/// GEPs.
static cl::opt<bool> SROAStrictInbounds("sroa-strict-inbounds", cl::init(false),
cl::Hidden);
namespace {
/// \brief A custom IRBuilder inserter which prefixes all names if they are
/// preserved.
template <bool preserveNames = true>
class IRBuilderPrefixedInserter
: public IRBuilderDefaultInserter<preserveNames> {
std::string Prefix;
public:
void SetNamePrefix(const Twine &P) { Prefix = P.str(); }
protected:
void InsertHelper(Instruction *I, const Twine &Name, BasicBlock *BB,
BasicBlock::iterator InsertPt) const {
IRBuilderDefaultInserter<preserveNames>::InsertHelper(
I, Name.isTriviallyEmpty() ? Name : Prefix + Name, BB, InsertPt);
}
};
// Specialization for not preserving the name is trivial.
template <>
class IRBuilderPrefixedInserter<false>
: public IRBuilderDefaultInserter<false> {
public:
void SetNamePrefix(const Twine &P) {}
};
/// \brief Provide a typedef for IRBuilder that drops names in release builds.
#ifndef NDEBUG
typedef llvm::IRBuilder<true, ConstantFolder, IRBuilderPrefixedInserter<true>>
IRBuilderTy;
#else
typedef llvm::IRBuilder<false, ConstantFolder, IRBuilderPrefixedInserter<false>>
IRBuilderTy;
#endif
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
namespace {
/// \brief A used slice of an alloca.
///
/// This structure represents a slice of an alloca used by some instruction. It
/// stores both the begin and end offsets of this use, a pointer to the use
/// itself, and a flag indicating whether we can classify the use as splittable
/// or not when forming partitions of the alloca.
class Slice {
/// \brief The beginning offset of the range.
uint64_t BeginOffset;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
/// \brief The ending offset, not included in the range.
uint64_t EndOffset;
/// \brief Storage for both the use of this slice and whether it can be
/// split.
PointerIntPair<Use *, 1, bool> UseAndIsSplittable;
public:
Slice() : BeginOffset(), EndOffset() {}
Slice(uint64_t BeginOffset, uint64_t EndOffset, Use *U, bool IsSplittable)
: BeginOffset(BeginOffset), EndOffset(EndOffset),
UseAndIsSplittable(U, IsSplittable) {}
uint64_t beginOffset() const { return BeginOffset; }
uint64_t endOffset() const { return EndOffset; }
bool isSplittable() const { return UseAndIsSplittable.getInt(); }
void makeUnsplittable() { UseAndIsSplittable.setInt(false); }
Use *getUse() const { return UseAndIsSplittable.getPointer(); }
bool isDead() const { return getUse() == nullptr; }
void kill() { UseAndIsSplittable.setPointer(nullptr); }
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
/// \brief Support for ordering ranges.
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
///
/// This provides an ordering over ranges such that start offsets are
/// always increasing, and within equal start offsets, the end offsets are
/// decreasing. Thus the spanning range comes first in a cluster with the
/// same start position.
bool operator<(const Slice &RHS) const {
if (beginOffset() < RHS.beginOffset())
return true;
if (beginOffset() > RHS.beginOffset())
return false;
if (isSplittable() != RHS.isSplittable())
return !isSplittable();
if (endOffset() > RHS.endOffset())
return true;
return false;
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
/// \brief Support comparison with a single offset to allow binary searches.
friend LLVM_ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED bool operator<(const Slice &LHS,
uint64_t RHSOffset) {
return LHS.beginOffset() < RHSOffset;
}
friend LLVM_ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED bool operator<(uint64_t LHSOffset,
const Slice &RHS) {
return LHSOffset < RHS.beginOffset();
}
bool operator==(const Slice &RHS) const {
return isSplittable() == RHS.isSplittable() &&
beginOffset() == RHS.beginOffset() && endOffset() == RHS.endOffset();
}
bool operator!=(const Slice &RHS) const { return !operator==(RHS); }
Reimplement SROA yet again. Same fundamental principle, but a totally different core implementation strategy. Previously, SROA would build a relatively elaborate partitioning of an alloca, associate uses with each partition, and then rewrite the uses of each partition in an attempt to break apart the alloca into chunks that could be promoted. This was very wasteful in terms of memory and compile time because regardless of how complex the alloca or how much we're able to do in breaking it up, all of the datastructure work to analyze the partitioning was done up front. The new implementation attempts to form partitions of the alloca lazily and on the fly, rewriting the uses that make up that partition as it goes. This has a few significant effects: 1) Much simpler data structures are used throughout. 2) No more double walk of the recursive use graph of the alloca, only walk it once. 3) No more complex algorithms for associating a particular use with a particular partition. 4) PHI and Select speculation is simplified and happens lazily. 5) More precise information is available about a specific use of the alloca, removing the need for some side datastructures. Ultimately, I think this is a much better implementation. It removes about 300 lines of code, but arguably removes more like 500 considering that some code grew in the process of being factored apart and cleaned up for this all to work. I've re-used as much of the old implementation as possible, which includes the lion's share of code in the form of the rewriting logic. The interesting new logic centers around how the uses of a partition are sorted, and split into actual partitions. Each instruction using a pointer derived from the alloca gets a 'Partition' entry. This name is totally wrong, but I'll do a rename in a follow-up commit as there is already enough churn here. The entry describes the offset range accessed and the nature of the access. Once we have all of these entries we sort them in a very specific way: increasing order of begin offset, followed by whether they are splittable uses (memcpy, etc), followed by the end offset or whatever. Sorting by splittability is important as it simplifies the collection of uses into a partition. Once we have these uses sorted, we walk from the beginning to the end building up a range of uses that form a partition of the alloca. Overlapping unsplittable uses are merged into a single partition while splittable uses are broken apart and carried from one partition to the next. A partition is also introduced to bridge splittable uses between the unsplittable regions when necessary. I've looked at the performance PRs fairly closely. PR15471 no longer will even load (the module is invalid). Not sure what is up there. PR15412 improves by between 5% and 10%, however it is nearly impossible to know what is holding it up as SROA (the entire pass) takes less time than reading the IR for that test case. The analysis takes the same time as running mem2reg on the final allocas. I suspect (without much evidence) that the new implementation will scale much better however, and it is just the small nature of the test cases that makes the changes small and noisy. Either way, it is still simpler and cleaner I think. llvm-svn: 186316
2013-07-15 18:30:19 +08:00
};
} // end anonymous namespace
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
namespace llvm {
template <typename T> struct isPodLike;
template <> struct isPodLike<Slice> { static const bool value = true; };
}
/// \brief Representation of the alloca slices.
///
/// This class represents the slices of an alloca which are formed by its
/// various uses. If a pointer escapes, we can't fully build a representation
/// for the slices used and we reflect that in this structure. The uses are
/// stored, sorted by increasing beginning offset and with unsplittable slices
/// starting at a particular offset before splittable slices.
[PM] Port SROA to the new pass manager. In some ways this is a very boring port to the new pass manager as there are no interesting analyses or dependencies or other oddities. However, this does introduce the first good example of a transformation pass with non-trivial state porting to the new pass manager. I've tried to carve out patterns here to replicate elsewhere, and would appreciate comments on whether folks like these patterns: - A common need in the new pass manager is to effectively lift the pass class and some of its state into a public header file. Prior to this, LLVM used anonymous namespaces to provide "module private" types and utilities, but that doesn't scale to cases where a public header file is needed and the new pass manager will exacerbate that. The pattern I've adopted here is to use the namespace-cased-name of the core pass (what would be a module if we had them) as a module-private namespace. Then utility and other code can be declared and defined in this namespace. At some point in the future, we could even have (conditionally compiled) code that used modules features when available to do the same basic thing. - I've split the actual pass run method in two in order to expose a private method usable by the old pass manager to wrap the new class with a minimum of duplicated code. I actually looked at a bunch of ways to automate or generate these, but they are all quite terrible IMO. The fundamental need is to extract the set of analyses which need to cross this interface boundary, and that will end up being too unpredictable to effectively encapsulate IMO. This is also a relatively small amount of boiler plate that will live a relatively short time, so I'm not too worried about the fact that it is boiler plate. The rest of the patch is totally boring but results in a massive diff (sorry). It just moves code around and removes or adds qualifiers to reflect the new name and nesting structure. Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12773 llvm-svn: 247501
2015-09-12 17:09:14 +08:00
class llvm::sroa::AllocaSlices {
public:
/// \brief Construct the slices of a particular alloca.
AllocaSlices(const DataLayout &DL, AllocaInst &AI);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
/// \brief Test whether a pointer to the allocation escapes our analysis.
///
/// If this is true, the slices are never fully built and should be
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
/// ignored.
bool isEscaped() const { return PointerEscapingInstr; }
/// \brief Support for iterating over the slices.
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
/// @{
typedef SmallVectorImpl<Slice>::iterator iterator;
typedef iterator_range<iterator> range;
iterator begin() { return Slices.begin(); }
iterator end() { return Slices.end(); }
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
typedef SmallVectorImpl<Slice>::const_iterator const_iterator;
typedef iterator_range<const_iterator> const_range;
const_iterator begin() const { return Slices.begin(); }
const_iterator end() const { return Slices.end(); }
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
/// @}
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
/// \brief Erase a range of slices.
void erase(iterator Start, iterator Stop) { Slices.erase(Start, Stop); }
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
/// \brief Insert new slices for this alloca.
///
/// This moves the slices into the alloca's slices collection, and re-sorts
/// everything so that the usual ordering properties of the alloca's slices
/// hold.
void insert(ArrayRef<Slice> NewSlices) {
int OldSize = Slices.size();
Slices.append(NewSlices.begin(), NewSlices.end());
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
auto SliceI = Slices.begin() + OldSize;
std::sort(SliceI, Slices.end());
std::inplace_merge(Slices.begin(), SliceI, Slices.end());
}
[PM] Port SROA to the new pass manager. In some ways this is a very boring port to the new pass manager as there are no interesting analyses or dependencies or other oddities. However, this does introduce the first good example of a transformation pass with non-trivial state porting to the new pass manager. I've tried to carve out patterns here to replicate elsewhere, and would appreciate comments on whether folks like these patterns: - A common need in the new pass manager is to effectively lift the pass class and some of its state into a public header file. Prior to this, LLVM used anonymous namespaces to provide "module private" types and utilities, but that doesn't scale to cases where a public header file is needed and the new pass manager will exacerbate that. The pattern I've adopted here is to use the namespace-cased-name of the core pass (what would be a module if we had them) as a module-private namespace. Then utility and other code can be declared and defined in this namespace. At some point in the future, we could even have (conditionally compiled) code that used modules features when available to do the same basic thing. - I've split the actual pass run method in two in order to expose a private method usable by the old pass manager to wrap the new class with a minimum of duplicated code. I actually looked at a bunch of ways to automate or generate these, but they are all quite terrible IMO. The fundamental need is to extract the set of analyses which need to cross this interface boundary, and that will end up being too unpredictable to effectively encapsulate IMO. This is also a relatively small amount of boiler plate that will live a relatively short time, so I'm not too worried about the fact that it is boiler plate. The rest of the patch is totally boring but results in a massive diff (sorry). It just moves code around and removes or adds qualifiers to reflect the new name and nesting structure. Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12773 llvm-svn: 247501
2015-09-12 17:09:14 +08:00
// Forward declare the iterator and range accessor for walking the
// partitions.
class partition_iterator;
[PM] Port SROA to the new pass manager. In some ways this is a very boring port to the new pass manager as there are no interesting analyses or dependencies or other oddities. However, this does introduce the first good example of a transformation pass with non-trivial state porting to the new pass manager. I've tried to carve out patterns here to replicate elsewhere, and would appreciate comments on whether folks like these patterns: - A common need in the new pass manager is to effectively lift the pass class and some of its state into a public header file. Prior to this, LLVM used anonymous namespaces to provide "module private" types and utilities, but that doesn't scale to cases where a public header file is needed and the new pass manager will exacerbate that. The pattern I've adopted here is to use the namespace-cased-name of the core pass (what would be a module if we had them) as a module-private namespace. Then utility and other code can be declared and defined in this namespace. At some point in the future, we could even have (conditionally compiled) code that used modules features when available to do the same basic thing. - I've split the actual pass run method in two in order to expose a private method usable by the old pass manager to wrap the new class with a minimum of duplicated code. I actually looked at a bunch of ways to automate or generate these, but they are all quite terrible IMO. The fundamental need is to extract the set of analyses which need to cross this interface boundary, and that will end up being too unpredictable to effectively encapsulate IMO. This is also a relatively small amount of boiler plate that will live a relatively short time, so I'm not too worried about the fact that it is boiler plate. The rest of the patch is totally boring but results in a massive diff (sorry). It just moves code around and removes or adds qualifiers to reflect the new name and nesting structure. Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12773 llvm-svn: 247501
2015-09-12 17:09:14 +08:00
iterator_range<partition_iterator> partitions();
/// \brief Access the dead users for this alloca.
ArrayRef<Instruction *> getDeadUsers() const { return DeadUsers; }
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
/// \brief Access the dead operands referring to this alloca.
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
///
/// These are operands which have cannot actually be used to refer to the
/// alloca as they are outside its range and the user doesn't correct for
/// that. These mostly consist of PHI node inputs and the like which we just
/// need to replace with undef.
ArrayRef<Use *> getDeadOperands() const { return DeadOperands; }
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
#if !defined(NDEBUG) || defined(LLVM_ENABLE_DUMP)
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
void print(raw_ostream &OS, const_iterator I, StringRef Indent = " ") const;
void printSlice(raw_ostream &OS, const_iterator I,
StringRef Indent = " ") const;
void printUse(raw_ostream &OS, const_iterator I,
StringRef Indent = " ") const;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
void print(raw_ostream &OS) const;
void dump(const_iterator I) const;
void dump() const;
#endif
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
private:
template <typename DerivedT, typename RetT = void> class BuilderBase;
class SliceBuilder;
friend class AllocaSlices::SliceBuilder;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
#if !defined(NDEBUG) || defined(LLVM_ENABLE_DUMP)
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
/// \brief Handle to alloca instruction to simplify method interfaces.
AllocaInst &AI;
#endif
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
/// \brief The instruction responsible for this alloca not having a known set
/// of slices.
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
///
/// When an instruction (potentially) escapes the pointer to the alloca, we
/// store a pointer to that here and abort trying to form slices of the
/// alloca. This will be null if the alloca slices are analyzed successfully.
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
Instruction *PointerEscapingInstr;
/// \brief The slices of the alloca.
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
///
/// We store a vector of the slices formed by uses of the alloca here. This
/// vector is sorted by increasing begin offset, and then the unsplittable
/// slices before the splittable ones. See the Slice inner class for more
/// details.
SmallVector<Slice, 8> Slices;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
/// \brief Instructions which will become dead if we rewrite the alloca.
///
/// Note that these are not separated by slice. This is because we expect an
/// alloca to be completely rewritten or not rewritten at all. If rewritten,
/// all these instructions can simply be removed and replaced with undef as
/// they come from outside of the allocated space.
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
SmallVector<Instruction *, 8> DeadUsers;
/// \brief Operands which will become dead if we rewrite the alloca.
///
/// These are operands that in their particular use can be replaced with
/// undef when we rewrite the alloca. These show up in out-of-bounds inputs
/// to PHI nodes and the like. They aren't entirely dead (there might be
/// a GEP back into the bounds using it elsewhere) and nor is the PHI, but we
/// want to swap this particular input for undef to simplify the use lists of
/// the alloca.
SmallVector<Use *, 8> DeadOperands;
};
[PM] Port SROA to the new pass manager. In some ways this is a very boring port to the new pass manager as there are no interesting analyses or dependencies or other oddities. However, this does introduce the first good example of a transformation pass with non-trivial state porting to the new pass manager. I've tried to carve out patterns here to replicate elsewhere, and would appreciate comments on whether folks like these patterns: - A common need in the new pass manager is to effectively lift the pass class and some of its state into a public header file. Prior to this, LLVM used anonymous namespaces to provide "module private" types and utilities, but that doesn't scale to cases where a public header file is needed and the new pass manager will exacerbate that. The pattern I've adopted here is to use the namespace-cased-name of the core pass (what would be a module if we had them) as a module-private namespace. Then utility and other code can be declared and defined in this namespace. At some point in the future, we could even have (conditionally compiled) code that used modules features when available to do the same basic thing. - I've split the actual pass run method in two in order to expose a private method usable by the old pass manager to wrap the new class with a minimum of duplicated code. I actually looked at a bunch of ways to automate or generate these, but they are all quite terrible IMO. The fundamental need is to extract the set of analyses which need to cross this interface boundary, and that will end up being too unpredictable to effectively encapsulate IMO. This is also a relatively small amount of boiler plate that will live a relatively short time, so I'm not too worried about the fact that it is boiler plate. The rest of the patch is totally boring but results in a massive diff (sorry). It just moves code around and removes or adds qualifiers to reflect the new name and nesting structure. Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12773 llvm-svn: 247501
2015-09-12 17:09:14 +08:00
/// \brief A partition of the slices.
///
/// An ephemeral representation for a range of slices which can be viewed as
/// a partition of the alloca. This range represents a span of the alloca's
/// memory which cannot be split, and provides access to all of the slices
/// overlapping some part of the partition.
///
/// Objects of this type are produced by traversing the alloca's slices, but
/// are only ephemeral and not persistent.
class llvm::sroa::Partition {
private:
friend class AllocaSlices;
friend class AllocaSlices::partition_iterator;
typedef AllocaSlices::iterator iterator;
/// \brief The beginning and ending offsets of the alloca for this
/// partition.
uint64_t BeginOffset, EndOffset;
/// \brief The start end end iterators of this partition.
iterator SI, SJ;
/// \brief A collection of split slice tails overlapping the partition.
SmallVector<Slice *, 4> SplitTails;
/// \brief Raw constructor builds an empty partition starting and ending at
/// the given iterator.
Partition(iterator SI) : SI(SI), SJ(SI) {}
public:
/// \brief The start offset of this partition.
///
/// All of the contained slices start at or after this offset.
uint64_t beginOffset() const { return BeginOffset; }
/// \brief The end offset of this partition.
///
/// All of the contained slices end at or before this offset.
uint64_t endOffset() const { return EndOffset; }
/// \brief The size of the partition.
///
/// Note that this can never be zero.
uint64_t size() const {
assert(BeginOffset < EndOffset && "Partitions must span some bytes!");
return EndOffset - BeginOffset;
}
/// \brief Test whether this partition contains no slices, and merely spans
/// a region occupied by split slices.
bool empty() const { return SI == SJ; }
/// \name Iterate slices that start within the partition.
/// These may be splittable or unsplittable. They have a begin offset >= the
/// partition begin offset.
/// @{
// FIXME: We should probably define a "concat_iterator" helper and use that
// to stitch together pointee_iterators over the split tails and the
// contiguous iterators of the partition. That would give a much nicer
// interface here. We could then additionally expose filtered iterators for
// split, unsplit, and unsplittable splices based on the usage patterns.
iterator begin() const { return SI; }
iterator end() const { return SJ; }
/// @}
/// \brief Get the sequence of split slice tails.
///
/// These tails are of slices which start before this partition but are
/// split and overlap into the partition. We accumulate these while forming
/// partitions.
ArrayRef<Slice *> splitSliceTails() const { return SplitTails; }
};
/// \brief An iterator over partitions of the alloca's slices.
///
/// This iterator implements the core algorithm for partitioning the alloca's
/// slices. It is a forward iterator as we don't support backtracking for
/// efficiency reasons, and re-use a single storage area to maintain the
/// current set of split slices.
///
/// It is templated on the slice iterator type to use so that it can operate
/// with either const or non-const slice iterators.
class AllocaSlices::partition_iterator
: public iterator_facade_base<partition_iterator, std::forward_iterator_tag,
Partition> {
friend class AllocaSlices;
/// \brief Most of the state for walking the partitions is held in a class
/// with a nice interface for examining them.
Partition P;
/// \brief We need to keep the end of the slices to know when to stop.
AllocaSlices::iterator SE;
/// \brief We also need to keep track of the maximum split end offset seen.
/// FIXME: Do we really?
uint64_t MaxSplitSliceEndOffset;
/// \brief Sets the partition to be empty at given iterator, and sets the
/// end iterator.
partition_iterator(AllocaSlices::iterator SI, AllocaSlices::iterator SE)
: P(SI), SE(SE), MaxSplitSliceEndOffset(0) {
// If not already at the end, advance our state to form the initial
// partition.
if (SI != SE)
advance();
}
/// \brief Advance the iterator to the next partition.
///
/// Requires that the iterator not be at the end of the slices.
void advance() {
assert((P.SI != SE || !P.SplitTails.empty()) &&
"Cannot advance past the end of the slices!");
// Clear out any split uses which have ended.
if (!P.SplitTails.empty()) {
if (P.EndOffset >= MaxSplitSliceEndOffset) {
// If we've finished all splits, this is easy.
P.SplitTails.clear();
MaxSplitSliceEndOffset = 0;
} else {
// Remove the uses which have ended in the prior partition. This
// cannot change the max split slice end because we just checked that
// the prior partition ended prior to that max.
P.SplitTails.erase(
std::remove_if(
P.SplitTails.begin(), P.SplitTails.end(),
[&](Slice *S) { return S->endOffset() <= P.EndOffset; }),
P.SplitTails.end());
assert(std::any_of(P.SplitTails.begin(), P.SplitTails.end(),
[&](Slice *S) {
return S->endOffset() == MaxSplitSliceEndOffset;
}) &&
"Could not find the current max split slice offset!");
assert(std::all_of(P.SplitTails.begin(), P.SplitTails.end(),
[&](Slice *S) {
return S->endOffset() <= MaxSplitSliceEndOffset;
}) &&
"Max split slice end offset is not actually the max!");
}
}
// If P.SI is already at the end, then we've cleared the split tail and
// now have an end iterator.
if (P.SI == SE) {
assert(P.SplitTails.empty() && "Failed to clear the split slices!");
return;
}
// If we had a non-empty partition previously, set up the state for
// subsequent partitions.
if (P.SI != P.SJ) {
// Accumulate all the splittable slices which started in the old
// partition into the split list.
for (Slice &S : P)
if (S.isSplittable() && S.endOffset() > P.EndOffset) {
P.SplitTails.push_back(&S);
MaxSplitSliceEndOffset =
std::max(S.endOffset(), MaxSplitSliceEndOffset);
}
// Start from the end of the previous partition.
P.SI = P.SJ;
// If P.SI is now at the end, we at most have a tail of split slices.
if (P.SI == SE) {
P.BeginOffset = P.EndOffset;
P.EndOffset = MaxSplitSliceEndOffset;
return;
}
// If the we have split slices and the next slice is after a gap and is
// not splittable immediately form an empty partition for the split
// slices up until the next slice begins.
if (!P.SplitTails.empty() && P.SI->beginOffset() != P.EndOffset &&
!P.SI->isSplittable()) {
P.BeginOffset = P.EndOffset;
P.EndOffset = P.SI->beginOffset();
return;
}
}
// OK, we need to consume new slices. Set the end offset based on the
// current slice, and step SJ past it. The beginning offset of the
// partition is the beginning offset of the next slice unless we have
// pre-existing split slices that are continuing, in which case we begin
// at the prior end offset.
P.BeginOffset = P.SplitTails.empty() ? P.SI->beginOffset() : P.EndOffset;
P.EndOffset = P.SI->endOffset();
++P.SJ;
// There are two strategies to form a partition based on whether the
// partition starts with an unsplittable slice or a splittable slice.
if (!P.SI->isSplittable()) {
// When we're forming an unsplittable region, it must always start at
// the first slice and will extend through its end.
assert(P.BeginOffset == P.SI->beginOffset());
// Form a partition including all of the overlapping slices with this
// unsplittable slice.
while (P.SJ != SE && P.SJ->beginOffset() < P.EndOffset) {
if (!P.SJ->isSplittable())
P.EndOffset = std::max(P.EndOffset, P.SJ->endOffset());
++P.SJ;
}
// We have a partition across a set of overlapping unsplittable
// partitions.
return;
}
// If we're starting with a splittable slice, then we need to form
// a synthetic partition spanning it and any other overlapping splittable
// splices.
assert(P.SI->isSplittable() && "Forming a splittable partition!");
// Collect all of the overlapping splittable slices.
while (P.SJ != SE && P.SJ->beginOffset() < P.EndOffset &&
P.SJ->isSplittable()) {
P.EndOffset = std::max(P.EndOffset, P.SJ->endOffset());
++P.SJ;
}
// Back upiP.EndOffset if we ended the span early when encountering an
// unsplittable slice. This synthesizes the early end offset of
// a partition spanning only splittable slices.
if (P.SJ != SE && P.SJ->beginOffset() < P.EndOffset) {
assert(!P.SJ->isSplittable());
P.EndOffset = P.SJ->beginOffset();
}
}
public:
bool operator==(const partition_iterator &RHS) const {
assert(SE == RHS.SE &&
"End iterators don't match between compared partition iterators!");
// The observed positions of partitions is marked by the P.SI iterator and
// the emptiness of the split slices. The latter is only relevant when
// P.SI == SE, as the end iterator will additionally have an empty split
// slices list, but the prior may have the same P.SI and a tail of split
// slices.
if (P.SI == RHS.P.SI && P.SplitTails.empty() == RHS.P.SplitTails.empty()) {
assert(P.SJ == RHS.P.SJ &&
"Same set of slices formed two different sized partitions!");
assert(P.SplitTails.size() == RHS.P.SplitTails.size() &&
"Same slice position with differently sized non-empty split "
"slice tails!");
return true;
}
return false;
}
partition_iterator &operator++() {
advance();
return *this;
}
Partition &operator*() { return P; }
};
/// \brief A forward range over the partitions of the alloca's slices.
///
/// This accesses an iterator range over the partitions of the alloca's
/// slices. It computes these partitions on the fly based on the overlapping
/// offsets of the slices and the ability to split them. It will visit "empty"
/// partitions to cover regions of the alloca only accessed via split
/// slices.
iterator_range<AllocaSlices::partition_iterator> AllocaSlices::partitions() {
return make_range(partition_iterator(begin(), end()),
partition_iterator(end(), end()));
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
static Value *foldSelectInst(SelectInst &SI) {
// If the condition being selected on is a constant or the same value is
// being selected between, fold the select. Yes this does (rarely) happen
// early on.
if (ConstantInt *CI = dyn_cast<ConstantInt>(SI.getCondition()))
return SI.getOperand(1 + CI->isZero());
if (SI.getOperand(1) == SI.getOperand(2))
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
return SI.getOperand(1);
return nullptr;
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
/// \brief A helper that folds a PHI node or a select.
static Value *foldPHINodeOrSelectInst(Instruction &I) {
if (PHINode *PN = dyn_cast<PHINode>(&I)) {
// If PN merges together the same value, return that value.
return PN->hasConstantValue();
}
return foldSelectInst(cast<SelectInst>(I));
}
/// \brief Builder for the alloca slices.
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
///
/// This class builds a set of alloca slices by recursively visiting the uses
/// of an alloca and making a slice for each load and store at each offset.
class AllocaSlices::SliceBuilder : public PtrUseVisitor<SliceBuilder> {
friend class PtrUseVisitor<SliceBuilder>;
friend class InstVisitor<SliceBuilder>;
typedef PtrUseVisitor<SliceBuilder> Base;
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
const uint64_t AllocSize;
AllocaSlices &AS;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
SmallDenseMap<Instruction *, unsigned> MemTransferSliceMap;
SmallDenseMap<Instruction *, uint64_t> PHIOrSelectSizes;
/// \brief Set to de-duplicate dead instructions found in the use walk.
SmallPtrSet<Instruction *, 4> VisitedDeadInsts;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
public:
SliceBuilder(const DataLayout &DL, AllocaInst &AI, AllocaSlices &AS)
: PtrUseVisitor<SliceBuilder>(DL),
AllocSize(DL.getTypeAllocSize(AI.getAllocatedType())), AS(AS) {}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
private:
void markAsDead(Instruction &I) {
if (VisitedDeadInsts.insert(&I).second)
AS.DeadUsers.push_back(&I);
}
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
void insertUse(Instruction &I, const APInt &Offset, uint64_t Size,
bool IsSplittable = false) {
// Completely skip uses which have a zero size or start either before or
// past the end of the allocation.
if (Size == 0 || Offset.uge(AllocSize)) {
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
DEBUG(dbgs() << "WARNING: Ignoring " << Size << " byte use @" << Offset
<< " which has zero size or starts outside of the "
<< AllocSize << " byte alloca:\n"
<< " alloca: " << AS.AI << "\n"
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
<< " use: " << I << "\n");
return markAsDead(I);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
uint64_t BeginOffset = Offset.getZExtValue();
uint64_t EndOffset = BeginOffset + Size;
// Clamp the end offset to the end of the allocation. Note that this is
// formulated to handle even the case where "BeginOffset + Size" overflows.
PR14972: SROA vs. GVN exposed a really bad bug in SROA. The fundamental problem is that SROA didn't allow for overly wide loads where the bits past the end of the alloca were masked away and the load was sufficiently aligned to ensure there is no risk of page fault, or other trapping behavior. With such widened loads, SROA would delete the load entirely rather than clamping it to the size of the alloca in order to allow mem2reg to fire. This was exposed by a test case that neatly arranged for GVN to run first, widening certain loads, followed by an inline step, and then SROA which miscompiles the code. However, I see no reason why this hasn't been plaguing us in other contexts. It seems deeply broken. Diagnosing all of the above took all of 10 minutes of debugging. The really annoying aspect is that fixing this completely breaks the pass. ;] There was an implicit reliance on the fact that no loads or stores extended past the alloca once we decided to rewrite them in the final stage of SROA. This was used to encode information about whether the loads and stores had been split across multiple partitions of the original alloca. That required threading explicit tracking of whether a *use* of a partition is split across multiple partitions. Once that was done, another problem arose: we allowed splitting of integer loads and stores iff they were loads and stores to the entire alloca. This is a really arbitrary limitation, and splitting at least some integer loads and stores is crucial to maximize promotion opportunities. My first attempt was to start removing the restriction entirely, but currently that does Very Bad Things by causing *many* common alloca patterns to be fully decomposed into i8 operations and lots of or-ing together to produce larger integers on demand. The code bloat is terrifying. That is still the right end-goal, but substantial work must be done to either merge partitions or ensure that small i8 values are eagerly merged in some other pass. Sadly, figuring all this out took essentially all the time and effort here. So the end result is that we allow splitting only when the load or store at least covers the alloca. That ensures widened loads and stores don't hurt SROA, and that we don't rampantly decompose operations more than we have previously. All of this was already fairly well tested, and so I've just updated the tests to cover the wide load behavior. I can add a test that crafts the pass ordering magic which caused the original PR, but that seems really brittle and to provide little benefit. The fundamental problem is that widened loads should Just Work. llvm-svn: 177055
2013-03-14 19:32:24 +08:00
// This may appear superficially to be something we could ignore entirely,
// but that is not so! There may be widened loads or PHI-node uses where
// some instructions are dead but not others. We can't completely ignore
// them, and so have to record at least the information here.
assert(AllocSize >= BeginOffset); // Established above.
if (Size > AllocSize - BeginOffset) {
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
DEBUG(dbgs() << "WARNING: Clamping a " << Size << " byte use @" << Offset
<< " to remain within the " << AllocSize << " byte alloca:\n"
<< " alloca: " << AS.AI << "\n"
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
<< " use: " << I << "\n");
EndOffset = AllocSize;
}
AS.Slices.push_back(Slice(BeginOffset, EndOffset, U, IsSplittable));
}
void visitBitCastInst(BitCastInst &BC) {
if (BC.use_empty())
return markAsDead(BC);
return Base::visitBitCastInst(BC);
}
void visitGetElementPtrInst(GetElementPtrInst &GEPI) {
if (GEPI.use_empty())
return markAsDead(GEPI);
if (SROAStrictInbounds && GEPI.isInBounds()) {
// FIXME: This is a manually un-factored variant of the basic code inside
// of GEPs with checking of the inbounds invariant specified in the
// langref in a very strict sense. If we ever want to enable
// SROAStrictInbounds, this code should be factored cleanly into
// PtrUseVisitor, but it is easier to experiment with SROAStrictInbounds
// by writing out the code here where we have tho underlying allocation
// size readily available.
APInt GEPOffset = Offset;
const DataLayout &DL = GEPI.getModule()->getDataLayout();
for (gep_type_iterator GTI = gep_type_begin(GEPI),
GTE = gep_type_end(GEPI);
GTI != GTE; ++GTI) {
ConstantInt *OpC = dyn_cast<ConstantInt>(GTI.getOperand());
if (!OpC)
break;
// Handle a struct index, which adds its field offset to the pointer.
if (StructType *STy = dyn_cast<StructType>(*GTI)) {
unsigned ElementIdx = OpC->getZExtValue();
const StructLayout *SL = DL.getStructLayout(STy);
GEPOffset +=
APInt(Offset.getBitWidth(), SL->getElementOffset(ElementIdx));
} else {
// For array or vector indices, scale the index by the size of the
// type.
APInt Index = OpC->getValue().sextOrTrunc(Offset.getBitWidth());
GEPOffset += Index * APInt(Offset.getBitWidth(),
DL.getTypeAllocSize(GTI.getIndexedType()));
}
// If this index has computed an intermediate pointer which is not
// inbounds, then the result of the GEP is a poison value and we can
// delete it and all uses.
if (GEPOffset.ugt(AllocSize))
return markAsDead(GEPI);
}
}
return Base::visitGetElementPtrInst(GEPI);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
void handleLoadOrStore(Type *Ty, Instruction &I, const APInt &Offset,
PR14972: SROA vs. GVN exposed a really bad bug in SROA. The fundamental problem is that SROA didn't allow for overly wide loads where the bits past the end of the alloca were masked away and the load was sufficiently aligned to ensure there is no risk of page fault, or other trapping behavior. With such widened loads, SROA would delete the load entirely rather than clamping it to the size of the alloca in order to allow mem2reg to fire. This was exposed by a test case that neatly arranged for GVN to run first, widening certain loads, followed by an inline step, and then SROA which miscompiles the code. However, I see no reason why this hasn't been plaguing us in other contexts. It seems deeply broken. Diagnosing all of the above took all of 10 minutes of debugging. The really annoying aspect is that fixing this completely breaks the pass. ;] There was an implicit reliance on the fact that no loads or stores extended past the alloca once we decided to rewrite them in the final stage of SROA. This was used to encode information about whether the loads and stores had been split across multiple partitions of the original alloca. That required threading explicit tracking of whether a *use* of a partition is split across multiple partitions. Once that was done, another problem arose: we allowed splitting of integer loads and stores iff they were loads and stores to the entire alloca. This is a really arbitrary limitation, and splitting at least some integer loads and stores is crucial to maximize promotion opportunities. My first attempt was to start removing the restriction entirely, but currently that does Very Bad Things by causing *many* common alloca patterns to be fully decomposed into i8 operations and lots of or-ing together to produce larger integers on demand. The code bloat is terrifying. That is still the right end-goal, but substantial work must be done to either merge partitions or ensure that small i8 values are eagerly merged in some other pass. Sadly, figuring all this out took essentially all the time and effort here. So the end result is that we allow splitting only when the load or store at least covers the alloca. That ensures widened loads and stores don't hurt SROA, and that we don't rampantly decompose operations more than we have previously. All of this was already fairly well tested, and so I've just updated the tests to cover the wide load behavior. I can add a test that crafts the pass ordering magic which caused the original PR, but that seems really brittle and to provide little benefit. The fundamental problem is that widened loads should Just Work. llvm-svn: 177055
2013-03-14 19:32:24 +08:00
uint64_t Size, bool IsVolatile) {
[SROA] Teach SROA to be more aggressive in splitting now that we have a pre-splitting pass over loads and stores. Historically, splitting could cause enough problems that I hamstrung the entire process with a requirement that splittable integer loads and stores must cover the entire alloca. All smaller loads and stores were unsplittable to prevent chaos from ensuing. With the new pre-splitting logic that does load/store pair splitting I introduced in r225061, we can now very nicely handle arbitrarily splittable loads and stores. In order to fully benefit from these smarts, we need to mark all of the integer loads and stores as splittable. However, we don't actually want to rewrite partitions with all integer loads and stores marked as splittable. This will fail to extract scalar integers from aggregates, which is kind of the point of SROA. =] In order to resolve this, what we really want to do is only do pre-splitting on the alloca slices with integer loads and stores fully splittable. This allows us to uncover all non-integer uses of the alloca that would benefit from a split in an integer load or store (and where introducing the split is safe because it is just memory transfer from a load to a store). Once done, we make all the non-whole-alloca integer loads and stores unsplittable just as they have historically been, repartition and rewrite. The result is that when there are integer loads and stores anywhere within an alloca (such as from a memcpy of a sub-object of a larger object), we can split them up if there are non-integer components to the aggregate hiding beneath. I've added the challenging test cases to demonstrate how this is able to promote to scalars even a case where we have even *partially* overlapping loads and stores. This restores the single-store behavior for small arrays of i8s which is really nice. I've restored both the little endian testing and big endian testing for these exactly as they were prior to r225061. It also forced me to be more aggressive in an alignment test to actually defeat SROA. =] Without the added volatiles there, we actually split up the weird i16 loads and produce nice double allocas with better alignment. This also uncovered a number of bugs where we failed to handle splittable load and store slices which didn't have a begininng offset of zero. Those fixes are included, and without them the existing test cases explode in glorious fireworks. =] I've kept support for leaving whole-alloca integer loads and stores as splittable even for the purpose of rewriting, but I think that's likely no longer needed. With the new pre-splitting, we might be able to remove all the splitting support for loads and stores from the rewriter. Not doing that in this patch to try to isolate any performance regressions that causes in an easy to find and revert chunk. llvm-svn: 225074
2015-01-02 11:55:54 +08:00
// We allow splitting of non-volatile loads and stores where the type is an
// integer type. These may be used to implement 'memcpy' or other "transfer
// of bits" patterns.
bool IsSplittable = Ty->isIntegerTy() && !IsVolatile;
insertUse(I, Offset, Size, IsSplittable);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
void visitLoadInst(LoadInst &LI) {
assert((!LI.isSimple() || LI.getType()->isSingleValueType()) &&
"All simple FCA loads should have been pre-split");
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
if (!IsOffsetKnown)
return PI.setAborted(&LI);
const DataLayout &DL = LI.getModule()->getDataLayout();
PR14972: SROA vs. GVN exposed a really bad bug in SROA. The fundamental problem is that SROA didn't allow for overly wide loads where the bits past the end of the alloca were masked away and the load was sufficiently aligned to ensure there is no risk of page fault, or other trapping behavior. With such widened loads, SROA would delete the load entirely rather than clamping it to the size of the alloca in order to allow mem2reg to fire. This was exposed by a test case that neatly arranged for GVN to run first, widening certain loads, followed by an inline step, and then SROA which miscompiles the code. However, I see no reason why this hasn't been plaguing us in other contexts. It seems deeply broken. Diagnosing all of the above took all of 10 minutes of debugging. The really annoying aspect is that fixing this completely breaks the pass. ;] There was an implicit reliance on the fact that no loads or stores extended past the alloca once we decided to rewrite them in the final stage of SROA. This was used to encode information about whether the loads and stores had been split across multiple partitions of the original alloca. That required threading explicit tracking of whether a *use* of a partition is split across multiple partitions. Once that was done, another problem arose: we allowed splitting of integer loads and stores iff they were loads and stores to the entire alloca. This is a really arbitrary limitation, and splitting at least some integer loads and stores is crucial to maximize promotion opportunities. My first attempt was to start removing the restriction entirely, but currently that does Very Bad Things by causing *many* common alloca patterns to be fully decomposed into i8 operations and lots of or-ing together to produce larger integers on demand. The code bloat is terrifying. That is still the right end-goal, but substantial work must be done to either merge partitions or ensure that small i8 values are eagerly merged in some other pass. Sadly, figuring all this out took essentially all the time and effort here. So the end result is that we allow splitting only when the load or store at least covers the alloca. That ensures widened loads and stores don't hurt SROA, and that we don't rampantly decompose operations more than we have previously. All of this was already fairly well tested, and so I've just updated the tests to cover the wide load behavior. I can add a test that crafts the pass ordering magic which caused the original PR, but that seems really brittle and to provide little benefit. The fundamental problem is that widened loads should Just Work. llvm-svn: 177055
2013-03-14 19:32:24 +08:00
uint64_t Size = DL.getTypeStoreSize(LI.getType());
return handleLoadOrStore(LI.getType(), LI, Offset, Size, LI.isVolatile());
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
void visitStoreInst(StoreInst &SI) {
Value *ValOp = SI.getValueOperand();
if (ValOp == *U)
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
return PI.setEscapedAndAborted(&SI);
if (!IsOffsetKnown)
return PI.setAborted(&SI);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
const DataLayout &DL = SI.getModule()->getDataLayout();
PR14972: SROA vs. GVN exposed a really bad bug in SROA. The fundamental problem is that SROA didn't allow for overly wide loads where the bits past the end of the alloca were masked away and the load was sufficiently aligned to ensure there is no risk of page fault, or other trapping behavior. With such widened loads, SROA would delete the load entirely rather than clamping it to the size of the alloca in order to allow mem2reg to fire. This was exposed by a test case that neatly arranged for GVN to run first, widening certain loads, followed by an inline step, and then SROA which miscompiles the code. However, I see no reason why this hasn't been plaguing us in other contexts. It seems deeply broken. Diagnosing all of the above took all of 10 minutes of debugging. The really annoying aspect is that fixing this completely breaks the pass. ;] There was an implicit reliance on the fact that no loads or stores extended past the alloca once we decided to rewrite them in the final stage of SROA. This was used to encode information about whether the loads and stores had been split across multiple partitions of the original alloca. That required threading explicit tracking of whether a *use* of a partition is split across multiple partitions. Once that was done, another problem arose: we allowed splitting of integer loads and stores iff they were loads and stores to the entire alloca. This is a really arbitrary limitation, and splitting at least some integer loads and stores is crucial to maximize promotion opportunities. My first attempt was to start removing the restriction entirely, but currently that does Very Bad Things by causing *many* common alloca patterns to be fully decomposed into i8 operations and lots of or-ing together to produce larger integers on demand. The code bloat is terrifying. That is still the right end-goal, but substantial work must be done to either merge partitions or ensure that small i8 values are eagerly merged in some other pass. Sadly, figuring all this out took essentially all the time and effort here. So the end result is that we allow splitting only when the load or store at least covers the alloca. That ensures widened loads and stores don't hurt SROA, and that we don't rampantly decompose operations more than we have previously. All of this was already fairly well tested, and so I've just updated the tests to cover the wide load behavior. I can add a test that crafts the pass ordering magic which caused the original PR, but that seems really brittle and to provide little benefit. The fundamental problem is that widened loads should Just Work. llvm-svn: 177055
2013-03-14 19:32:24 +08:00
uint64_t Size = DL.getTypeStoreSize(ValOp->getType());
// If this memory access can be shown to *statically* extend outside the
// bounds of of the allocation, it's behavior is undefined, so simply
// ignore it. Note that this is more strict than the generic clamping
// behavior of insertUse. We also try to handle cases which might run the
// risk of overflow.
// FIXME: We should instead consider the pointer to have escaped if this
// function is being instrumented for addressing bugs or race conditions.
if (Size > AllocSize || Offset.ugt(AllocSize - Size)) {
PR14972: SROA vs. GVN exposed a really bad bug in SROA. The fundamental problem is that SROA didn't allow for overly wide loads where the bits past the end of the alloca were masked away and the load was sufficiently aligned to ensure there is no risk of page fault, or other trapping behavior. With such widened loads, SROA would delete the load entirely rather than clamping it to the size of the alloca in order to allow mem2reg to fire. This was exposed by a test case that neatly arranged for GVN to run first, widening certain loads, followed by an inline step, and then SROA which miscompiles the code. However, I see no reason why this hasn't been plaguing us in other contexts. It seems deeply broken. Diagnosing all of the above took all of 10 minutes of debugging. The really annoying aspect is that fixing this completely breaks the pass. ;] There was an implicit reliance on the fact that no loads or stores extended past the alloca once we decided to rewrite them in the final stage of SROA. This was used to encode information about whether the loads and stores had been split across multiple partitions of the original alloca. That required threading explicit tracking of whether a *use* of a partition is split across multiple partitions. Once that was done, another problem arose: we allowed splitting of integer loads and stores iff they were loads and stores to the entire alloca. This is a really arbitrary limitation, and splitting at least some integer loads and stores is crucial to maximize promotion opportunities. My first attempt was to start removing the restriction entirely, but currently that does Very Bad Things by causing *many* common alloca patterns to be fully decomposed into i8 operations and lots of or-ing together to produce larger integers on demand. The code bloat is terrifying. That is still the right end-goal, but substantial work must be done to either merge partitions or ensure that small i8 values are eagerly merged in some other pass. Sadly, figuring all this out took essentially all the time and effort here. So the end result is that we allow splitting only when the load or store at least covers the alloca. That ensures widened loads and stores don't hurt SROA, and that we don't rampantly decompose operations more than we have previously. All of this was already fairly well tested, and so I've just updated the tests to cover the wide load behavior. I can add a test that crafts the pass ordering magic which caused the original PR, but that seems really brittle and to provide little benefit. The fundamental problem is that widened loads should Just Work. llvm-svn: 177055
2013-03-14 19:32:24 +08:00
DEBUG(dbgs() << "WARNING: Ignoring " << Size << " byte store @" << Offset
<< " which extends past the end of the " << AllocSize
<< " byte alloca:\n"
<< " alloca: " << AS.AI << "\n"
PR14972: SROA vs. GVN exposed a really bad bug in SROA. The fundamental problem is that SROA didn't allow for overly wide loads where the bits past the end of the alloca were masked away and the load was sufficiently aligned to ensure there is no risk of page fault, or other trapping behavior. With such widened loads, SROA would delete the load entirely rather than clamping it to the size of the alloca in order to allow mem2reg to fire. This was exposed by a test case that neatly arranged for GVN to run first, widening certain loads, followed by an inline step, and then SROA which miscompiles the code. However, I see no reason why this hasn't been plaguing us in other contexts. It seems deeply broken. Diagnosing all of the above took all of 10 minutes of debugging. The really annoying aspect is that fixing this completely breaks the pass. ;] There was an implicit reliance on the fact that no loads or stores extended past the alloca once we decided to rewrite them in the final stage of SROA. This was used to encode information about whether the loads and stores had been split across multiple partitions of the original alloca. That required threading explicit tracking of whether a *use* of a partition is split across multiple partitions. Once that was done, another problem arose: we allowed splitting of integer loads and stores iff they were loads and stores to the entire alloca. This is a really arbitrary limitation, and splitting at least some integer loads and stores is crucial to maximize promotion opportunities. My first attempt was to start removing the restriction entirely, but currently that does Very Bad Things by causing *many* common alloca patterns to be fully decomposed into i8 operations and lots of or-ing together to produce larger integers on demand. The code bloat is terrifying. That is still the right end-goal, but substantial work must be done to either merge partitions or ensure that small i8 values are eagerly merged in some other pass. Sadly, figuring all this out took essentially all the time and effort here. So the end result is that we allow splitting only when the load or store at least covers the alloca. That ensures widened loads and stores don't hurt SROA, and that we don't rampantly decompose operations more than we have previously. All of this was already fairly well tested, and so I've just updated the tests to cover the wide load behavior. I can add a test that crafts the pass ordering magic which caused the original PR, but that seems really brittle and to provide little benefit. The fundamental problem is that widened loads should Just Work. llvm-svn: 177055
2013-03-14 19:32:24 +08:00
<< " use: " << SI << "\n");
return markAsDead(SI);
PR14972: SROA vs. GVN exposed a really bad bug in SROA. The fundamental problem is that SROA didn't allow for overly wide loads where the bits past the end of the alloca were masked away and the load was sufficiently aligned to ensure there is no risk of page fault, or other trapping behavior. With such widened loads, SROA would delete the load entirely rather than clamping it to the size of the alloca in order to allow mem2reg to fire. This was exposed by a test case that neatly arranged for GVN to run first, widening certain loads, followed by an inline step, and then SROA which miscompiles the code. However, I see no reason why this hasn't been plaguing us in other contexts. It seems deeply broken. Diagnosing all of the above took all of 10 minutes of debugging. The really annoying aspect is that fixing this completely breaks the pass. ;] There was an implicit reliance on the fact that no loads or stores extended past the alloca once we decided to rewrite them in the final stage of SROA. This was used to encode information about whether the loads and stores had been split across multiple partitions of the original alloca. That required threading explicit tracking of whether a *use* of a partition is split across multiple partitions. Once that was done, another problem arose: we allowed splitting of integer loads and stores iff they were loads and stores to the entire alloca. This is a really arbitrary limitation, and splitting at least some integer loads and stores is crucial to maximize promotion opportunities. My first attempt was to start removing the restriction entirely, but currently that does Very Bad Things by causing *many* common alloca patterns to be fully decomposed into i8 operations and lots of or-ing together to produce larger integers on demand. The code bloat is terrifying. That is still the right end-goal, but substantial work must be done to either merge partitions or ensure that small i8 values are eagerly merged in some other pass. Sadly, figuring all this out took essentially all the time and effort here. So the end result is that we allow splitting only when the load or store at least covers the alloca. That ensures widened loads and stores don't hurt SROA, and that we don't rampantly decompose operations more than we have previously. All of this was already fairly well tested, and so I've just updated the tests to cover the wide load behavior. I can add a test that crafts the pass ordering magic which caused the original PR, but that seems really brittle and to provide little benefit. The fundamental problem is that widened loads should Just Work. llvm-svn: 177055
2013-03-14 19:32:24 +08:00
}
assert((!SI.isSimple() || ValOp->getType()->isSingleValueType()) &&
"All simple FCA stores should have been pre-split");
PR14972: SROA vs. GVN exposed a really bad bug in SROA. The fundamental problem is that SROA didn't allow for overly wide loads where the bits past the end of the alloca were masked away and the load was sufficiently aligned to ensure there is no risk of page fault, or other trapping behavior. With such widened loads, SROA would delete the load entirely rather than clamping it to the size of the alloca in order to allow mem2reg to fire. This was exposed by a test case that neatly arranged for GVN to run first, widening certain loads, followed by an inline step, and then SROA which miscompiles the code. However, I see no reason why this hasn't been plaguing us in other contexts. It seems deeply broken. Diagnosing all of the above took all of 10 minutes of debugging. The really annoying aspect is that fixing this completely breaks the pass. ;] There was an implicit reliance on the fact that no loads or stores extended past the alloca once we decided to rewrite them in the final stage of SROA. This was used to encode information about whether the loads and stores had been split across multiple partitions of the original alloca. That required threading explicit tracking of whether a *use* of a partition is split across multiple partitions. Once that was done, another problem arose: we allowed splitting of integer loads and stores iff they were loads and stores to the entire alloca. This is a really arbitrary limitation, and splitting at least some integer loads and stores is crucial to maximize promotion opportunities. My first attempt was to start removing the restriction entirely, but currently that does Very Bad Things by causing *many* common alloca patterns to be fully decomposed into i8 operations and lots of or-ing together to produce larger integers on demand. The code bloat is terrifying. That is still the right end-goal, but substantial work must be done to either merge partitions or ensure that small i8 values are eagerly merged in some other pass. Sadly, figuring all this out took essentially all the time and effort here. So the end result is that we allow splitting only when the load or store at least covers the alloca. That ensures widened loads and stores don't hurt SROA, and that we don't rampantly decompose operations more than we have previously. All of this was already fairly well tested, and so I've just updated the tests to cover the wide load behavior. I can add a test that crafts the pass ordering magic which caused the original PR, but that seems really brittle and to provide little benefit. The fundamental problem is that widened loads should Just Work. llvm-svn: 177055
2013-03-14 19:32:24 +08:00
handleLoadOrStore(ValOp->getType(), SI, Offset, Size, SI.isVolatile());
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
void visitMemSetInst(MemSetInst &II) {
assert(II.getRawDest() == *U && "Pointer use is not the destination?");
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
ConstantInt *Length = dyn_cast<ConstantInt>(II.getLength());
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
if ((Length && Length->getValue() == 0) ||
(IsOffsetKnown && Offset.uge(AllocSize)))
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
// Zero-length mem transfer intrinsics can be ignored entirely.
return markAsDead(II);
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
if (!IsOffsetKnown)
return PI.setAborted(&II);
insertUse(II, Offset, Length ? Length->getLimitedValue()
: AllocSize - Offset.getLimitedValue(),
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
(bool)Length);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
void visitMemTransferInst(MemTransferInst &II) {
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
ConstantInt *Length = dyn_cast<ConstantInt>(II.getLength());
if (Length && Length->getValue() == 0)
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// Zero-length mem transfer intrinsics can be ignored entirely.
return markAsDead(II);
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
// Because we can visit these intrinsics twice, also check to see if the
// first time marked this instruction as dead. If so, skip it.
if (VisitedDeadInsts.count(&II))
return;
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
if (!IsOffsetKnown)
return PI.setAborted(&II);
// This side of the transfer is completely out-of-bounds, and so we can
// nuke the entire transfer. However, we also need to nuke the other side
// if already added to our partitions.
// FIXME: Yet another place we really should bypass this when
// instrumenting for ASan.
if (Offset.uge(AllocSize)) {
SmallDenseMap<Instruction *, unsigned>::iterator MTPI =
MemTransferSliceMap.find(&II);
if (MTPI != MemTransferSliceMap.end())
AS.Slices[MTPI->second].kill();
return markAsDead(II);
}
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
uint64_t RawOffset = Offset.getLimitedValue();
uint64_t Size = Length ? Length->getLimitedValue() : AllocSize - RawOffset;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// Check for the special case where the same exact value is used for both
// source and dest.
if (*U == II.getRawDest() && *U == II.getRawSource()) {
// For non-volatile transfers this is a no-op.
if (!II.isVolatile())
return markAsDead(II);
return insertUse(II, Offset, Size, /*IsSplittable=*/false);
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// If we have seen both source and destination for a mem transfer, then
// they both point to the same alloca.
bool Inserted;
SmallDenseMap<Instruction *, unsigned>::iterator MTPI;
std::tie(MTPI, Inserted) =
MemTransferSliceMap.insert(std::make_pair(&II, AS.Slices.size()));
unsigned PrevIdx = MTPI->second;
if (!Inserted) {
Slice &PrevP = AS.Slices[PrevIdx];
// Check if the begin offsets match and this is a non-volatile transfer.
// In that case, we can completely elide the transfer.
if (!II.isVolatile() && PrevP.beginOffset() == RawOffset) {
PrevP.kill();
return markAsDead(II);
}
// Otherwise we have an offset transfer within the same alloca. We can't
// split those.
PrevP.makeUnsplittable();
}
// Insert the use now that we've fixed up the splittable nature.
insertUse(II, Offset, Size, /*IsSplittable=*/Inserted && Length);
// Check that we ended up with a valid index in the map.
assert(AS.Slices[PrevIdx].getUse()->getUser() == &II &&
"Map index doesn't point back to a slice with this user.");
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
// Disable SRoA for any intrinsics except for lifetime invariants.
2013-02-20 06:02:21 +08:00
// FIXME: What about debug intrinsics? This matches old behavior, but
// doesn't make sense.
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
void visitIntrinsicInst(IntrinsicInst &II) {
if (!IsOffsetKnown)
return PI.setAborted(&II);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
if (II.getIntrinsicID() == Intrinsic::lifetime_start ||
II.getIntrinsicID() == Intrinsic::lifetime_end) {
ConstantInt *Length = cast<ConstantInt>(II.getArgOperand(0));
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
uint64_t Size = std::min(AllocSize - Offset.getLimitedValue(),
Length->getLimitedValue());
insertUse(II, Offset, Size, true);
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
return;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
Base::visitIntrinsicInst(II);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
Instruction *hasUnsafePHIOrSelectUse(Instruction *Root, uint64_t &Size) {
// We consider any PHI or select that results in a direct load or store of
// the same offset to be a viable use for slicing purposes. These uses
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// are considered unsplittable and the size is the maximum loaded or stored
// size.
SmallPtrSet<Instruction *, 4> Visited;
SmallVector<std::pair<Instruction *, Instruction *>, 4> Uses;
Visited.insert(Root);
Uses.push_back(std::make_pair(cast<Instruction>(*U), Root));
const DataLayout &DL = Root->getModule()->getDataLayout();
// If there are no loads or stores, the access is dead. We mark that as
// a size zero access.
Size = 0;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
do {
Instruction *I, *UsedI;
std::tie(UsedI, I) = Uses.pop_back_val();
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
if (LoadInst *LI = dyn_cast<LoadInst>(I)) {
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
Size = std::max(Size, DL.getTypeStoreSize(LI->getType()));
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
continue;
}
if (StoreInst *SI = dyn_cast<StoreInst>(I)) {
Value *Op = SI->getOperand(0);
if (Op == UsedI)
return SI;
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
Size = std::max(Size, DL.getTypeStoreSize(Op->getType()));
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
continue;
}
if (GetElementPtrInst *GEP = dyn_cast<GetElementPtrInst>(I)) {
if (!GEP->hasAllZeroIndices())
return GEP;
} else if (!isa<BitCastInst>(I) && !isa<PHINode>(I) &&
!isa<SelectInst>(I)) {
return I;
}
[C++11] Add range based accessors for the Use-Def chain of a Value. This requires a number of steps. 1) Move value_use_iterator into the Value class as an implementation detail 2) Change it to actually be a *Use* iterator rather than a *User* iterator. 3) Add an adaptor which is a User iterator that always looks through the Use to the User. 4) Wrap these in Value::use_iterator and Value::user_iterator typedefs. 5) Add the range adaptors as Value::uses() and Value::users(). 6) Update *all* of the callers to correctly distinguish between whether they wanted a use_iterator (and to explicitly dig out the User when needed), or a user_iterator which makes the Use itself totally opaque. Because #6 requires churning essentially everything that walked the Use-Def chains, I went ahead and added all of the range adaptors and switched them to range-based loops where appropriate. Also because the renaming requires at least churning every line of code, it didn't make any sense to split these up into multiple commits -- all of which would touch all of the same lies of code. The result is still not quite optimal. The Value::use_iterator is a nice regular iterator, but Value::user_iterator is an iterator over User*s rather than over the User objects themselves. As a consequence, it fits a bit awkwardly into the range-based world and it has the weird extra-dereferencing 'operator->' that so many of our iterators have. I think this could be fixed by providing something which transforms a range of T&s into a range of T*s, but that *can* be separated into another patch, and it isn't yet 100% clear whether this is the right move. However, this change gets us most of the benefit and cleans up a substantial amount of code around Use and User. =] llvm-svn: 203364
2014-03-09 11:16:01 +08:00
for (User *U : I->users())
if (Visited.insert(cast<Instruction>(U)).second)
[C++11] Add range based accessors for the Use-Def chain of a Value. This requires a number of steps. 1) Move value_use_iterator into the Value class as an implementation detail 2) Change it to actually be a *Use* iterator rather than a *User* iterator. 3) Add an adaptor which is a User iterator that always looks through the Use to the User. 4) Wrap these in Value::use_iterator and Value::user_iterator typedefs. 5) Add the range adaptors as Value::uses() and Value::users(). 6) Update *all* of the callers to correctly distinguish between whether they wanted a use_iterator (and to explicitly dig out the User when needed), or a user_iterator which makes the Use itself totally opaque. Because #6 requires churning essentially everything that walked the Use-Def chains, I went ahead and added all of the range adaptors and switched them to range-based loops where appropriate. Also because the renaming requires at least churning every line of code, it didn't make any sense to split these up into multiple commits -- all of which would touch all of the same lies of code. The result is still not quite optimal. The Value::use_iterator is a nice regular iterator, but Value::user_iterator is an iterator over User*s rather than over the User objects themselves. As a consequence, it fits a bit awkwardly into the range-based world and it has the weird extra-dereferencing 'operator->' that so many of our iterators have. I think this could be fixed by providing something which transforms a range of T&s into a range of T*s, but that *can* be separated into another patch, and it isn't yet 100% clear whether this is the right move. However, this change gets us most of the benefit and cleans up a substantial amount of code around Use and User. =] llvm-svn: 203364
2014-03-09 11:16:01 +08:00
Uses.push_back(std::make_pair(I, cast<Instruction>(U)));
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
} while (!Uses.empty());
return nullptr;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
void visitPHINodeOrSelectInst(Instruction &I) {
assert(isa<PHINode>(I) || isa<SelectInst>(I));
if (I.use_empty())
return markAsDead(I);
// TODO: We could use SimplifyInstruction here to fold PHINodes and
// SelectInsts. However, doing so requires to change the current
// dead-operand-tracking mechanism. For instance, suppose neither loading
// from %U nor %other traps. Then "load (select undef, %U, %other)" does not
// trap either. However, if we simply replace %U with undef using the
// current dead-operand-tracking mechanism, "load (select undef, undef,
// %other)" may trap because the select may return the first operand
// "undef".
if (Value *Result = foldPHINodeOrSelectInst(I)) {
if (Result == *U)
// If the result of the constant fold will be the pointer, recurse
// through the PHI/select as if we had RAUW'ed it.
enqueueUsers(I);
else
// Otherwise the operand to the PHI/select is dead, and we can replace
// it with undef.
AS.DeadOperands.push_back(U);
return;
}
if (!IsOffsetKnown)
return PI.setAborted(&I);
// See if we already have computed info on this node.
uint64_t &Size = PHIOrSelectSizes[&I];
if (!Size) {
// This is a new PHI/Select, check for an unsafe use of it.
if (Instruction *UnsafeI = hasUnsafePHIOrSelectUse(&I, Size))
return PI.setAborted(UnsafeI);
}
// For PHI and select operands outside the alloca, we can't nuke the entire
// phi or select -- the other side might still be relevant, so we special
// case them here and use a separate structure to track the operands
// themselves which should be replaced with undef.
// FIXME: This should instead be escaped in the event we're instrumenting
// for address sanitization.
if (Offset.uge(AllocSize)) {
AS.DeadOperands.push_back(U);
return;
}
insertUse(I, Offset, Size);
}
void visitPHINode(PHINode &PN) { visitPHINodeOrSelectInst(PN); }
void visitSelectInst(SelectInst &SI) { visitPHINodeOrSelectInst(SI); }
/// \brief Disable SROA entirely if there are unhandled users of the alloca.
void visitInstruction(Instruction &I) { PI.setAborted(&I); }
};
AllocaSlices::AllocaSlices(const DataLayout &DL, AllocaInst &AI)
:
#if !defined(NDEBUG) || defined(LLVM_ENABLE_DUMP)
AI(AI),
#endif
PointerEscapingInstr(nullptr) {
SliceBuilder PB(DL, AI, *this);
SliceBuilder::PtrInfo PtrI = PB.visitPtr(AI);
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
if (PtrI.isEscaped() || PtrI.isAborted()) {
// FIXME: We should sink the escape vs. abort info into the caller nicely,
// possibly by just storing the PtrInfo in the AllocaSlices.
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
PointerEscapingInstr = PtrI.getEscapingInst() ? PtrI.getEscapingInst()
: PtrI.getAbortingInst();
assert(PointerEscapingInstr && "Did not track a bad instruction");
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
return;
Add a new visitor for walking the uses of a pointer value. This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc. It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it performs conservative escape analysis. However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed going forward: 1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers. 2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset tracking isn't needed. 3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values. The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified. SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which this utility now provides. Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory. While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such heroics. The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward, and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer. Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help reviewing and debugging this patch. llvm-svn: 169728
2012-12-10 16:28:39 +08:00
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
Slices.erase(std::remove_if(Slices.begin(), Slices.end(),
[](const Slice &S) {
return S.isDead();
}),
Slices.end());
#if __cplusplus >= 201103L && !defined(NDEBUG)
if (SROARandomShuffleSlices) {
std::mt19937 MT(static_cast<unsigned>(sys::TimeValue::now().msec()));
std::shuffle(Slices.begin(), Slices.end(), MT);
}
#endif
// Sort the uses. This arranges for the offsets to be in ascending order,
// and the sizes to be in descending order.
std::sort(Slices.begin(), Slices.end());
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
#if !defined(NDEBUG) || defined(LLVM_ENABLE_DUMP)
void AllocaSlices::print(raw_ostream &OS, const_iterator I,
StringRef Indent) const {
printSlice(OS, I, Indent);
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
OS << "\n";
printUse(OS, I, Indent);
}
void AllocaSlices::printSlice(raw_ostream &OS, const_iterator I,
StringRef Indent) const {
OS << Indent << "[" << I->beginOffset() << "," << I->endOffset() << ")"
<< " slice #" << (I - begin())
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
<< (I->isSplittable() ? " (splittable)" : "");
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
void AllocaSlices::printUse(raw_ostream &OS, const_iterator I,
StringRef Indent) const {
OS << Indent << " used by: " << *I->getUse()->getUser() << "\n";
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
void AllocaSlices::print(raw_ostream &OS) const {
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
if (PointerEscapingInstr) {
OS << "Can't analyze slices for alloca: " << AI << "\n"
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
<< " A pointer to this alloca escaped by:\n"
<< " " << *PointerEscapingInstr << "\n";
return;
}
OS << "Slices of alloca: " << AI << "\n";
for (const_iterator I = begin(), E = end(); I != E; ++I)
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
print(OS, I);
}
LLVM_DUMP_METHOD void AllocaSlices::dump(const_iterator I) const {
print(dbgs(), I);
}
LLVM_DUMP_METHOD void AllocaSlices::dump() const { print(dbgs()); }
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
#endif // !defined(NDEBUG) || defined(LLVM_ENABLE_DUMP)
/// Walk the range of a partitioning looking for a common type to cover this
/// sequence of slices.
static Type *findCommonType(AllocaSlices::const_iterator B,
AllocaSlices::const_iterator E,
uint64_t EndOffset) {
Type *Ty = nullptr;
bool TyIsCommon = true;
IntegerType *ITy = nullptr;
// Note that we need to look at *every* alloca slice's Use to ensure we
// always get consistent results regardless of the order of slices.
for (AllocaSlices::const_iterator I = B; I != E; ++I) {
Use *U = I->getUse();
if (isa<IntrinsicInst>(*U->getUser()))
continue;
if (I->beginOffset() != B->beginOffset() || I->endOffset() != EndOffset)
continue;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
Type *UserTy = nullptr;
if (LoadInst *LI = dyn_cast<LoadInst>(U->getUser())) {
UserTy = LI->getType();
} else if (StoreInst *SI = dyn_cast<StoreInst>(U->getUser())) {
UserTy = SI->getValueOperand()->getType();
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
if (IntegerType *UserITy = dyn_cast_or_null<IntegerType>(UserTy)) {
// If the type is larger than the partition, skip it. We only encounter
// this for split integer operations where we want to use the type of the
// entity causing the split. Also skip if the type is not a byte width
// multiple.
if (UserITy->getBitWidth() % 8 != 0 ||
UserITy->getBitWidth() / 8 > (EndOffset - B->beginOffset()))
continue;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// Track the largest bitwidth integer type used in this way in case there
// is no common type.
if (!ITy || ITy->getBitWidth() < UserITy->getBitWidth())
ITy = UserITy;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
// To avoid depending on the order of slices, Ty and TyIsCommon must not
// depend on types skipped above.
if (!UserTy || (Ty && Ty != UserTy))
TyIsCommon = false; // Give up on anything but an iN type.
else
Ty = UserTy;
}
return TyIsCommon ? Ty : ITy;
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
/// PHI instructions that use an alloca and are subsequently loaded can be
/// rewritten to load both input pointers in the pred blocks and then PHI the
/// results, allowing the load of the alloca to be promoted.
/// From this:
/// %P2 = phi [i32* %Alloca, i32* %Other]
/// %V = load i32* %P2
/// to:
/// %V1 = load i32* %Alloca -> will be mem2reg'd
/// ...
/// %V2 = load i32* %Other
/// ...
/// %V = phi [i32 %V1, i32 %V2]
///
/// We can do this to a select if its only uses are loads and if the operands
/// to the select can be loaded unconditionally.
///
/// FIXME: This should be hoisted into a generic utility, likely in
/// Transforms/Util/Local.h
static bool isSafePHIToSpeculate(PHINode &PN) {
// For now, we can only do this promotion if the load is in the same block
// as the PHI, and if there are no stores between the phi and load.
// TODO: Allow recursive phi users.
// TODO: Allow stores.
BasicBlock *BB = PN.getParent();
unsigned MaxAlign = 0;
bool HaveLoad = false;
[C++11] Add range based accessors for the Use-Def chain of a Value. This requires a number of steps. 1) Move value_use_iterator into the Value class as an implementation detail 2) Change it to actually be a *Use* iterator rather than a *User* iterator. 3) Add an adaptor which is a User iterator that always looks through the Use to the User. 4) Wrap these in Value::use_iterator and Value::user_iterator typedefs. 5) Add the range adaptors as Value::uses() and Value::users(). 6) Update *all* of the callers to correctly distinguish between whether they wanted a use_iterator (and to explicitly dig out the User when needed), or a user_iterator which makes the Use itself totally opaque. Because #6 requires churning essentially everything that walked the Use-Def chains, I went ahead and added all of the range adaptors and switched them to range-based loops where appropriate. Also because the renaming requires at least churning every line of code, it didn't make any sense to split these up into multiple commits -- all of which would touch all of the same lies of code. The result is still not quite optimal. The Value::use_iterator is a nice regular iterator, but Value::user_iterator is an iterator over User*s rather than over the User objects themselves. As a consequence, it fits a bit awkwardly into the range-based world and it has the weird extra-dereferencing 'operator->' that so many of our iterators have. I think this could be fixed by providing something which transforms a range of T&s into a range of T*s, but that *can* be separated into another patch, and it isn't yet 100% clear whether this is the right move. However, this change gets us most of the benefit and cleans up a substantial amount of code around Use and User. =] llvm-svn: 203364
2014-03-09 11:16:01 +08:00
for (User *U : PN.users()) {
LoadInst *LI = dyn_cast<LoadInst>(U);
if (!LI || !LI->isSimple())
return false;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// For now we only allow loads in the same block as the PHI. This is
// a common case that happens when instcombine merges two loads through
// a PHI.
if (LI->getParent() != BB)
return false;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// Ensure that there are no instructions between the PHI and the load that
// could store.
for (BasicBlock::iterator BBI(PN); &*BBI != LI; ++BBI)
if (BBI->mayWriteToMemory())
return false;
MaxAlign = std::max(MaxAlign, LI->getAlignment());
HaveLoad = true;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
if (!HaveLoad)
return false;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
const DataLayout &DL = PN.getModule()->getDataLayout();
// We can only transform this if it is safe to push the loads into the
// predecessor blocks. The only thing to watch out for is that we can't put
// a possibly trapping load in the predecessor if it is a critical edge.
for (unsigned Idx = 0, Num = PN.getNumIncomingValues(); Idx != Num; ++Idx) {
TerminatorInst *TI = PN.getIncomingBlock(Idx)->getTerminator();
Value *InVal = PN.getIncomingValue(Idx);
// If the value is produced by the terminator of the predecessor (an
// invoke) or it has side-effects, there is no valid place to put a load
// in the predecessor.
if (TI == InVal || TI->mayHaveSideEffects())
return false;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// If the predecessor has a single successor, then the edge isn't
// critical.
if (TI->getNumSuccessors() == 1)
continue;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// If this pointer is always safe to load, or if we can prove that there
// is already a load in the block, then we can move the load to the pred
// block.
if (isDereferenceablePointer(InVal, DL) ||
isSafeToLoadUnconditionally(InVal, TI, MaxAlign))
continue;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
return false;
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
return true;
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
static void speculatePHINodeLoads(PHINode &PN) {
DEBUG(dbgs() << " original: " << PN << "\n");
Type *LoadTy = cast<PointerType>(PN.getType())->getElementType();
IRBuilderTy PHIBuilder(&PN);
PHINode *NewPN = PHIBuilder.CreatePHI(LoadTy, PN.getNumIncomingValues(),
PN.getName() + ".sroa.speculated");
// Get the AA tags and alignment to use from one of the loads. It doesn't
// matter which one we get and if any differ.
[C++11] Add range based accessors for the Use-Def chain of a Value. This requires a number of steps. 1) Move value_use_iterator into the Value class as an implementation detail 2) Change it to actually be a *Use* iterator rather than a *User* iterator. 3) Add an adaptor which is a User iterator that always looks through the Use to the User. 4) Wrap these in Value::use_iterator and Value::user_iterator typedefs. 5) Add the range adaptors as Value::uses() and Value::users(). 6) Update *all* of the callers to correctly distinguish between whether they wanted a use_iterator (and to explicitly dig out the User when needed), or a user_iterator which makes the Use itself totally opaque. Because #6 requires churning essentially everything that walked the Use-Def chains, I went ahead and added all of the range adaptors and switched them to range-based loops where appropriate. Also because the renaming requires at least churning every line of code, it didn't make any sense to split these up into multiple commits -- all of which would touch all of the same lies of code. The result is still not quite optimal. The Value::use_iterator is a nice regular iterator, but Value::user_iterator is an iterator over User*s rather than over the User objects themselves. As a consequence, it fits a bit awkwardly into the range-based world and it has the weird extra-dereferencing 'operator->' that so many of our iterators have. I think this could be fixed by providing something which transforms a range of T&s into a range of T*s, but that *can* be separated into another patch, and it isn't yet 100% clear whether this is the right move. However, this change gets us most of the benefit and cleans up a substantial amount of code around Use and User. =] llvm-svn: 203364
2014-03-09 11:16:01 +08:00
LoadInst *SomeLoad = cast<LoadInst>(PN.user_back());
AAMDNodes AATags;
SomeLoad->getAAMetadata(AATags);
unsigned Align = SomeLoad->getAlignment();
// Rewrite all loads of the PN to use the new PHI.
while (!PN.use_empty()) {
[C++11] Add range based accessors for the Use-Def chain of a Value. This requires a number of steps. 1) Move value_use_iterator into the Value class as an implementation detail 2) Change it to actually be a *Use* iterator rather than a *User* iterator. 3) Add an adaptor which is a User iterator that always looks through the Use to the User. 4) Wrap these in Value::use_iterator and Value::user_iterator typedefs. 5) Add the range adaptors as Value::uses() and Value::users(). 6) Update *all* of the callers to correctly distinguish between whether they wanted a use_iterator (and to explicitly dig out the User when needed), or a user_iterator which makes the Use itself totally opaque. Because #6 requires churning essentially everything that walked the Use-Def chains, I went ahead and added all of the range adaptors and switched them to range-based loops where appropriate. Also because the renaming requires at least churning every line of code, it didn't make any sense to split these up into multiple commits -- all of which would touch all of the same lies of code. The result is still not quite optimal. The Value::use_iterator is a nice regular iterator, but Value::user_iterator is an iterator over User*s rather than over the User objects themselves. As a consequence, it fits a bit awkwardly into the range-based world and it has the weird extra-dereferencing 'operator->' that so many of our iterators have. I think this could be fixed by providing something which transforms a range of T&s into a range of T*s, but that *can* be separated into another patch, and it isn't yet 100% clear whether this is the right move. However, this change gets us most of the benefit and cleans up a substantial amount of code around Use and User. =] llvm-svn: 203364
2014-03-09 11:16:01 +08:00
LoadInst *LI = cast<LoadInst>(PN.user_back());
LI->replaceAllUsesWith(NewPN);
LI->eraseFromParent();
}
// Inject loads into all of the pred blocks.
for (unsigned Idx = 0, Num = PN.getNumIncomingValues(); Idx != Num; ++Idx) {
BasicBlock *Pred = PN.getIncomingBlock(Idx);
TerminatorInst *TI = Pred->getTerminator();
Value *InVal = PN.getIncomingValue(Idx);
IRBuilderTy PredBuilder(TI);
LoadInst *Load = PredBuilder.CreateLoad(
InVal, (PN.getName() + ".sroa.speculate.load." + Pred->getName()));
++NumLoadsSpeculated;
Load->setAlignment(Align);
if (AATags)
Load->setAAMetadata(AATags);
NewPN->addIncoming(Load, Pred);
}
DEBUG(dbgs() << " speculated to: " << *NewPN << "\n");
PN.eraseFromParent();
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
/// Select instructions that use an alloca and are subsequently loaded can be
/// rewritten to load both input pointers and then select between the result,
/// allowing the load of the alloca to be promoted.
/// From this:
/// %P2 = select i1 %cond, i32* %Alloca, i32* %Other
/// %V = load i32* %P2
/// to:
/// %V1 = load i32* %Alloca -> will be mem2reg'd
/// %V2 = load i32* %Other
/// %V = select i1 %cond, i32 %V1, i32 %V2
///
/// We can do this to a select if its only uses are loads and if the operand
/// to the select can be loaded unconditionally.
static bool isSafeSelectToSpeculate(SelectInst &SI) {
Value *TValue = SI.getTrueValue();
Value *FValue = SI.getFalseValue();
const DataLayout &DL = SI.getModule()->getDataLayout();
bool TDerefable = isDereferenceablePointer(TValue, DL);
bool FDerefable = isDereferenceablePointer(FValue, DL);
[C++11] Add range based accessors for the Use-Def chain of a Value. This requires a number of steps. 1) Move value_use_iterator into the Value class as an implementation detail 2) Change it to actually be a *Use* iterator rather than a *User* iterator. 3) Add an adaptor which is a User iterator that always looks through the Use to the User. 4) Wrap these in Value::use_iterator and Value::user_iterator typedefs. 5) Add the range adaptors as Value::uses() and Value::users(). 6) Update *all* of the callers to correctly distinguish between whether they wanted a use_iterator (and to explicitly dig out the User when needed), or a user_iterator which makes the Use itself totally opaque. Because #6 requires churning essentially everything that walked the Use-Def chains, I went ahead and added all of the range adaptors and switched them to range-based loops where appropriate. Also because the renaming requires at least churning every line of code, it didn't make any sense to split these up into multiple commits -- all of which would touch all of the same lies of code. The result is still not quite optimal. The Value::use_iterator is a nice regular iterator, but Value::user_iterator is an iterator over User*s rather than over the User objects themselves. As a consequence, it fits a bit awkwardly into the range-based world and it has the weird extra-dereferencing 'operator->' that so many of our iterators have. I think this could be fixed by providing something which transforms a range of T&s into a range of T*s, but that *can* be separated into another patch, and it isn't yet 100% clear whether this is the right move. However, this change gets us most of the benefit and cleans up a substantial amount of code around Use and User. =] llvm-svn: 203364
2014-03-09 11:16:01 +08:00
for (User *U : SI.users()) {
LoadInst *LI = dyn_cast<LoadInst>(U);
if (!LI || !LI->isSimple())
return false;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// Both operands to the select need to be dereferencable, either
// absolutely (e.g. allocas) or at this point because we can see other
// accesses to it.
if (!TDerefable &&
!isSafeToLoadUnconditionally(TValue, LI, LI->getAlignment()))
return false;
if (!FDerefable &&
!isSafeToLoadUnconditionally(FValue, LI, LI->getAlignment()))
return false;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
return true;
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
static void speculateSelectInstLoads(SelectInst &SI) {
DEBUG(dbgs() << " original: " << SI << "\n");
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
IRBuilderTy IRB(&SI);
Value *TV = SI.getTrueValue();
Value *FV = SI.getFalseValue();
// Replace the loads of the select with a select of two loads.
while (!SI.use_empty()) {
[C++11] Add range based accessors for the Use-Def chain of a Value. This requires a number of steps. 1) Move value_use_iterator into the Value class as an implementation detail 2) Change it to actually be a *Use* iterator rather than a *User* iterator. 3) Add an adaptor which is a User iterator that always looks through the Use to the User. 4) Wrap these in Value::use_iterator and Value::user_iterator typedefs. 5) Add the range adaptors as Value::uses() and Value::users(). 6) Update *all* of the callers to correctly distinguish between whether they wanted a use_iterator (and to explicitly dig out the User when needed), or a user_iterator which makes the Use itself totally opaque. Because #6 requires churning essentially everything that walked the Use-Def chains, I went ahead and added all of the range adaptors and switched them to range-based loops where appropriate. Also because the renaming requires at least churning every line of code, it didn't make any sense to split these up into multiple commits -- all of which would touch all of the same lies of code. The result is still not quite optimal. The Value::use_iterator is a nice regular iterator, but Value::user_iterator is an iterator over User*s rather than over the User objects themselves. As a consequence, it fits a bit awkwardly into the range-based world and it has the weird extra-dereferencing 'operator->' that so many of our iterators have. I think this could be fixed by providing something which transforms a range of T&s into a range of T*s, but that *can* be separated into another patch, and it isn't yet 100% clear whether this is the right move. However, this change gets us most of the benefit and cleans up a substantial amount of code around Use and User. =] llvm-svn: 203364
2014-03-09 11:16:01 +08:00
LoadInst *LI = cast<LoadInst>(SI.user_back());
assert(LI->isSimple() && "We only speculate simple loads");
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
IRB.SetInsertPoint(LI);
LoadInst *TL =
IRB.CreateLoad(TV, LI->getName() + ".sroa.speculate.load.true");
LoadInst *FL =
IRB.CreateLoad(FV, LI->getName() + ".sroa.speculate.load.false");
NumLoadsSpeculated += 2;
// Transfer alignment and AA info if present.
TL->setAlignment(LI->getAlignment());
FL->setAlignment(LI->getAlignment());
AAMDNodes Tags;
LI->getAAMetadata(Tags);
if (Tags) {
TL->setAAMetadata(Tags);
FL->setAAMetadata(Tags);
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
Value *V = IRB.CreateSelect(SI.getCondition(), TL, FL,
LI->getName() + ".sroa.speculated");
DEBUG(dbgs() << " speculated to: " << *V << "\n");
LI->replaceAllUsesWith(V);
LI->eraseFromParent();
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
SI.eraseFromParent();
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
/// \brief Build a GEP out of a base pointer and indices.
///
/// This will return the BasePtr if that is valid, or build a new GEP
/// instruction using the IRBuilder if GEP-ing is needed.
static Value *buildGEP(IRBuilderTy &IRB, Value *BasePtr,
SmallVectorImpl<Value *> &Indices, Twine NamePrefix) {
if (Indices.empty())
return BasePtr;
// A single zero index is a no-op, so check for this and avoid building a GEP
// in that case.
if (Indices.size() == 1 && cast<ConstantInt>(Indices.back())->isZero())
return BasePtr;
return IRB.CreateInBoundsGEP(nullptr, BasePtr, Indices,
NamePrefix + "sroa_idx");
}
/// \brief Get a natural GEP off of the BasePtr walking through Ty toward
/// TargetTy without changing the offset of the pointer.
///
/// This routine assumes we've already established a properly offset GEP with
/// Indices, and arrived at the Ty type. The goal is to continue to GEP with
/// zero-indices down through type layers until we find one the same as
/// TargetTy. If we can't find one with the same type, we at least try to use
/// one with the same size. If none of that works, we just produce the GEP as
/// indicated by Indices to have the correct offset.
static Value *getNaturalGEPWithType(IRBuilderTy &IRB, const DataLayout &DL,
Value *BasePtr, Type *Ty, Type *TargetTy,
SmallVectorImpl<Value *> &Indices,
Twine NamePrefix) {
if (Ty == TargetTy)
return buildGEP(IRB, BasePtr, Indices, NamePrefix);
// Pointer size to use for the indices.
unsigned PtrSize = DL.getPointerTypeSizeInBits(BasePtr->getType());
// See if we can descend into a struct and locate a field with the correct
// type.
unsigned NumLayers = 0;
Type *ElementTy = Ty;
do {
if (ElementTy->isPointerTy())
break;
if (ArrayType *ArrayTy = dyn_cast<ArrayType>(ElementTy)) {
ElementTy = ArrayTy->getElementType();
Indices.push_back(IRB.getIntN(PtrSize, 0));
} else if (VectorType *VectorTy = dyn_cast<VectorType>(ElementTy)) {
ElementTy = VectorTy->getElementType();
Indices.push_back(IRB.getInt32(0));
} else if (StructType *STy = dyn_cast<StructType>(ElementTy)) {
if (STy->element_begin() == STy->element_end())
break; // Nothing left to descend into.
ElementTy = *STy->element_begin();
Indices.push_back(IRB.getInt32(0));
} else {
break;
}
++NumLayers;
} while (ElementTy != TargetTy);
if (ElementTy != TargetTy)
Indices.erase(Indices.end() - NumLayers, Indices.end());
return buildGEP(IRB, BasePtr, Indices, NamePrefix);
}
/// \brief Recursively compute indices for a natural GEP.
///
/// This is the recursive step for getNaturalGEPWithOffset that walks down the
/// element types adding appropriate indices for the GEP.
static Value *getNaturalGEPRecursively(IRBuilderTy &IRB, const DataLayout &DL,
Value *Ptr, Type *Ty, APInt &Offset,
Type *TargetTy,
SmallVectorImpl<Value *> &Indices,
Twine NamePrefix) {
if (Offset == 0)
return getNaturalGEPWithType(IRB, DL, Ptr, Ty, TargetTy, Indices,
NamePrefix);
// We can't recurse through pointer types.
if (Ty->isPointerTy())
return nullptr;
// We try to analyze GEPs over vectors here, but note that these GEPs are
// extremely poorly defined currently. The long-term goal is to remove GEPing
// over a vector from the IR completely.
if (VectorType *VecTy = dyn_cast<VectorType>(Ty)) {
unsigned ElementSizeInBits = DL.getTypeSizeInBits(VecTy->getScalarType());
if (ElementSizeInBits % 8 != 0) {
// GEPs over non-multiple of 8 size vector elements are invalid.
return nullptr;
}
APInt ElementSize(Offset.getBitWidth(), ElementSizeInBits / 8);
APInt NumSkippedElements = Offset.sdiv(ElementSize);
if (NumSkippedElements.ugt(VecTy->getNumElements()))
return nullptr;
Offset -= NumSkippedElements * ElementSize;
Indices.push_back(IRB.getInt(NumSkippedElements));
return getNaturalGEPRecursively(IRB, DL, Ptr, VecTy->getElementType(),
Offset, TargetTy, Indices, NamePrefix);
}
if (ArrayType *ArrTy = dyn_cast<ArrayType>(Ty)) {
Type *ElementTy = ArrTy->getElementType();
APInt ElementSize(Offset.getBitWidth(), DL.getTypeAllocSize(ElementTy));
APInt NumSkippedElements = Offset.sdiv(ElementSize);
if (NumSkippedElements.ugt(ArrTy->getNumElements()))
return nullptr;
Offset -= NumSkippedElements * ElementSize;
Indices.push_back(IRB.getInt(NumSkippedElements));
return getNaturalGEPRecursively(IRB, DL, Ptr, ElementTy, Offset, TargetTy,
Indices, NamePrefix);
}
StructType *STy = dyn_cast<StructType>(Ty);
if (!STy)
return nullptr;
const StructLayout *SL = DL.getStructLayout(STy);
uint64_t StructOffset = Offset.getZExtValue();
if (StructOffset >= SL->getSizeInBytes())
return nullptr;
unsigned Index = SL->getElementContainingOffset(StructOffset);
Offset -= APInt(Offset.getBitWidth(), SL->getElementOffset(Index));
Type *ElementTy = STy->getElementType(Index);
if (Offset.uge(DL.getTypeAllocSize(ElementTy)))
return nullptr; // The offset points into alignment padding.
Indices.push_back(IRB.getInt32(Index));
return getNaturalGEPRecursively(IRB, DL, Ptr, ElementTy, Offset, TargetTy,
Indices, NamePrefix);
}
/// \brief Get a natural GEP from a base pointer to a particular offset and
/// resulting in a particular type.
///
/// The goal is to produce a "natural" looking GEP that works with the existing
/// composite types to arrive at the appropriate offset and element type for
/// a pointer. TargetTy is the element type the returned GEP should point-to if
/// possible. We recurse by decreasing Offset, adding the appropriate index to
/// Indices, and setting Ty to the result subtype.
///
/// If no natural GEP can be constructed, this function returns null.
static Value *getNaturalGEPWithOffset(IRBuilderTy &IRB, const DataLayout &DL,
Value *Ptr, APInt Offset, Type *TargetTy,
SmallVectorImpl<Value *> &Indices,
Twine NamePrefix) {
PointerType *Ty = cast<PointerType>(Ptr->getType());
// Don't consider any GEPs through an i8* as natural unless the TargetTy is
// an i8.
if (Ty == IRB.getInt8PtrTy(Ty->getAddressSpace()) && TargetTy->isIntegerTy(8))
return nullptr;
Type *ElementTy = Ty->getElementType();
if (!ElementTy->isSized())
return nullptr; // We can't GEP through an unsized element.
APInt ElementSize(Offset.getBitWidth(), DL.getTypeAllocSize(ElementTy));
if (ElementSize == 0)
return nullptr; // Zero-length arrays can't help us build a natural GEP.
APInt NumSkippedElements = Offset.sdiv(ElementSize);
Offset -= NumSkippedElements * ElementSize;
Indices.push_back(IRB.getInt(NumSkippedElements));
return getNaturalGEPRecursively(IRB, DL, Ptr, ElementTy, Offset, TargetTy,
Indices, NamePrefix);
}
/// \brief Compute an adjusted pointer from Ptr by Offset bytes where the
/// resulting pointer has PointerTy.
///
/// This tries very hard to compute a "natural" GEP which arrives at the offset
/// and produces the pointer type desired. Where it cannot, it will try to use
/// the natural GEP to arrive at the offset and bitcast to the type. Where that
/// fails, it will try to use an existing i8* and GEP to the byte offset and
/// bitcast to the type.
///
/// The strategy for finding the more natural GEPs is to peel off layers of the
/// pointer, walking back through bit casts and GEPs, searching for a base
/// pointer from which we can compute a natural GEP with the desired
2013-02-20 06:02:21 +08:00
/// properties. The algorithm tries to fold as many constant indices into
/// a single GEP as possible, thus making each GEP more independent of the
/// surrounding code.
static Value *getAdjustedPtr(IRBuilderTy &IRB, const DataLayout &DL, Value *Ptr,
APInt Offset, Type *PointerTy, Twine NamePrefix) {
// Even though we don't look through PHI nodes, we could be called on an
// instruction in an unreachable block, which may be on a cycle.
SmallPtrSet<Value *, 4> Visited;
Visited.insert(Ptr);
SmallVector<Value *, 4> Indices;
// We may end up computing an offset pointer that has the wrong type. If we
// never are able to compute one directly that has the correct type, we'll
// fall back to it, so keep it and the base it was computed from around here.
Value *OffsetPtr = nullptr;
Value *OffsetBasePtr;
// Remember any i8 pointer we come across to re-use if we need to do a raw
// byte offset.
Value *Int8Ptr = nullptr;
APInt Int8PtrOffset(Offset.getBitWidth(), 0);
Type *TargetTy = PointerTy->getPointerElementType();
do {
// First fold any existing GEPs into the offset.
while (GEPOperator *GEP = dyn_cast<GEPOperator>(Ptr)) {
APInt GEPOffset(Offset.getBitWidth(), 0);
if (!GEP->accumulateConstantOffset(DL, GEPOffset))
break;
Offset += GEPOffset;
Ptr = GEP->getPointerOperand();
if (!Visited.insert(Ptr).second)
break;
}
// See if we can perform a natural GEP here.
Indices.clear();
if (Value *P = getNaturalGEPWithOffset(IRB, DL, Ptr, Offset, TargetTy,
Indices, NamePrefix)) {
// If we have a new natural pointer at the offset, clear out any old
// offset pointer we computed. Unless it is the base pointer or
// a non-instruction, we built a GEP we don't need. Zap it.
if (OffsetPtr && OffsetPtr != OffsetBasePtr)
if (Instruction *I = dyn_cast<Instruction>(OffsetPtr)) {
assert(I->use_empty() && "Built a GEP with uses some how!");
I->eraseFromParent();
}
OffsetPtr = P;
OffsetBasePtr = Ptr;
// If we also found a pointer of the right type, we're done.
if (P->getType() == PointerTy)
return P;
}
// Stash this pointer if we've found an i8*.
if (Ptr->getType()->isIntegerTy(8)) {
Int8Ptr = Ptr;
Int8PtrOffset = Offset;
}
// Peel off a layer of the pointer and update the offset appropriately.
if (Operator::getOpcode(Ptr) == Instruction::BitCast) {
Ptr = cast<Operator>(Ptr)->getOperand(0);
} else if (GlobalAlias *GA = dyn_cast<GlobalAlias>(Ptr)) {
if (GA->mayBeOverridden())
break;
Ptr = GA->getAliasee();
} else {
break;
}
assert(Ptr->getType()->isPointerTy() && "Unexpected operand type!");
} while (Visited.insert(Ptr).second);
if (!OffsetPtr) {
if (!Int8Ptr) {
Int8Ptr = IRB.CreateBitCast(
Ptr, IRB.getInt8PtrTy(PointerTy->getPointerAddressSpace()),
NamePrefix + "sroa_raw_cast");
Int8PtrOffset = Offset;
}
OffsetPtr = Int8PtrOffset == 0
? Int8Ptr
: IRB.CreateInBoundsGEP(IRB.getInt8Ty(), Int8Ptr,
IRB.getInt(Int8PtrOffset),
NamePrefix + "sroa_raw_idx");
}
Ptr = OffsetPtr;
// On the off chance we were targeting i8*, guard the bitcast here.
if (Ptr->getType() != PointerTy)
Ptr = IRB.CreateBitCast(Ptr, PointerTy, NamePrefix + "sroa_cast");
return Ptr;
}
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
/// \brief Compute the adjusted alignment for a load or store from an offset.
static unsigned getAdjustedAlignment(Instruction *I, uint64_t Offset,
const DataLayout &DL) {
unsigned Alignment;
Type *Ty;
if (auto *LI = dyn_cast<LoadInst>(I)) {
Alignment = LI->getAlignment();
Ty = LI->getType();
} else if (auto *SI = dyn_cast<StoreInst>(I)) {
Alignment = SI->getAlignment();
Ty = SI->getValueOperand()->getType();
} else {
llvm_unreachable("Only loads and stores are allowed!");
}
if (!Alignment)
Alignment = DL.getABITypeAlignment(Ty);
return MinAlign(Alignment, Offset);
}
/// \brief Test whether we can convert a value from the old to the new type.
///
/// This predicate should be used to guard calls to convertValue in order to
/// ensure that we only try to convert viable values. The strategy is that we
/// will peel off single element struct and array wrappings to get to an
/// underlying value, and convert that value.
static bool canConvertValue(const DataLayout &DL, Type *OldTy, Type *NewTy) {
if (OldTy == NewTy)
return true;
[SROA] Fix a nasty pile of bugs to do with big-endian, different alloca types and loads, loads or stores widened past the size of an alloca, etc. This started off with a bug report about big-endian behavior with bitfields and loads and stores to a { i32, i24 } struct. An initial attempt to fix this was sent for review in D10357, but that didn't really get to the root of the problem. The core issue was that canConvertValue and convertValue in SROA were handling different bitwidth integers by doing a zext of the integer. It wouldn't do a trunc though, only a zext! This would in turn lead SROA to form an i24 load from an i24 alloca, zext it to i32, and then use it. This would at least produce the wrong value for big-endian systems. One of my many false starts here was to correct the computation for big-endian systems by shifting. But this doesn't actually work because the original code has a 64-bit store to the entire 8 bytes, and a 32-bit load of the last 4 bytes, and because the alloc size is 8 bytes, we can't lose that last (least significant if bigendian) byte! The real problem here is that we're forming an i24 load in SROA which is actually not sufficiently wide to load all of the necessary bits here. The source has an i32 load, and SROA needs to form that as well. The straightforward way to do this is to disable the zext logic in canConvertValue and convertValue, forcing us to actually load all 32-bits. This seems like a really good change, but it in turn breaks several other parts of SROA. First in the chain of knock-on failures, we had places where we were doing integer-widening promotion even though some of the integer loads or stores extended *past the end* of the alloca's memory! There was even a comment about preventing this, but it only prevented the case where the type had a different bit size from its store size. So I added checks to handle the cases where we actually have a widened load or store and to avoid trying to special integer widening promotion in those cases. Second, we actually rely on the ability to promote in the face of loads past the end of an alloca! This is important so that we can (for example) speculate loads around PHI nodes to do more promotion. The bits loaded are garbage, but as long as they aren't used and the alignment is suitable high (which it wasn't in the test case!) this is "fine". And we can't stop promoting here, lots of things stop working well if we do. So we need to add specific logic to handle the extension (and truncation) case, but *only* where that extension or truncation are over bytes that *are outside the alloca's allocated storage* and thus totally bogus to load or store. And of course, once we add back this correct handling of extension or truncation, we need to correctly handle bigendian systems to avoid re-introducing the exact bug that started us off on this chain of misery in the first place, but this time even more subtle as it only happens along speculated loads atop a PHI node. I've ported an existing test for PHI speculation to the big-endian test file and checked that we get that part correct, and I've added several more interesting big-endian test cases that should help check that we're getting this correct. Fun times. llvm-svn: 242869
2015-07-22 11:32:42 +08:00
// For integer types, we can't handle any bit-width differences. This would
// break both vector conversions with extension and introduce endianness
// issues when in conjunction with loads and stores.
if (isa<IntegerType>(OldTy) && isa<IntegerType>(NewTy)) {
assert(cast<IntegerType>(OldTy)->getBitWidth() !=
cast<IntegerType>(NewTy)->getBitWidth() &&
"We can't have the same bitwidth for different int types");
return false;
}
if (DL.getTypeSizeInBits(NewTy) != DL.getTypeSizeInBits(OldTy))
return false;
if (!NewTy->isSingleValueType() || !OldTy->isSingleValueType())
return false;
// We can convert pointers to integers and vice-versa. Same for vectors
// of pointers and integers.
OldTy = OldTy->getScalarType();
NewTy = NewTy->getScalarType();
if (NewTy->isPointerTy() || OldTy->isPointerTy()) {
if (NewTy->isPointerTy() && OldTy->isPointerTy())
return true;
if (NewTy->isIntegerTy() || OldTy->isIntegerTy())
return true;
return false;
}
return true;
}
/// \brief Generic routine to convert an SSA value to a value of a different
/// type.
///
/// This will try various different casting techniques, such as bitcasts,
/// inttoptr, and ptrtoint casts. Use the \c canConvertValue predicate to test
/// two types for viability with this routine.
static Value *convertValue(const DataLayout &DL, IRBuilderTy &IRB, Value *V,
Type *NewTy) {
Type *OldTy = V->getType();
assert(canConvertValue(DL, OldTy, NewTy) && "Value not convertable to type");
if (OldTy == NewTy)
return V;
[SROA] Fix a nasty pile of bugs to do with big-endian, different alloca types and loads, loads or stores widened past the size of an alloca, etc. This started off with a bug report about big-endian behavior with bitfields and loads and stores to a { i32, i24 } struct. An initial attempt to fix this was sent for review in D10357, but that didn't really get to the root of the problem. The core issue was that canConvertValue and convertValue in SROA were handling different bitwidth integers by doing a zext of the integer. It wouldn't do a trunc though, only a zext! This would in turn lead SROA to form an i24 load from an i24 alloca, zext it to i32, and then use it. This would at least produce the wrong value for big-endian systems. One of my many false starts here was to correct the computation for big-endian systems by shifting. But this doesn't actually work because the original code has a 64-bit store to the entire 8 bytes, and a 32-bit load of the last 4 bytes, and because the alloc size is 8 bytes, we can't lose that last (least significant if bigendian) byte! The real problem here is that we're forming an i24 load in SROA which is actually not sufficiently wide to load all of the necessary bits here. The source has an i32 load, and SROA needs to form that as well. The straightforward way to do this is to disable the zext logic in canConvertValue and convertValue, forcing us to actually load all 32-bits. This seems like a really good change, but it in turn breaks several other parts of SROA. First in the chain of knock-on failures, we had places where we were doing integer-widening promotion even though some of the integer loads or stores extended *past the end* of the alloca's memory! There was even a comment about preventing this, but it only prevented the case where the type had a different bit size from its store size. So I added checks to handle the cases where we actually have a widened load or store and to avoid trying to special integer widening promotion in those cases. Second, we actually rely on the ability to promote in the face of loads past the end of an alloca! This is important so that we can (for example) speculate loads around PHI nodes to do more promotion. The bits loaded are garbage, but as long as they aren't used and the alignment is suitable high (which it wasn't in the test case!) this is "fine". And we can't stop promoting here, lots of things stop working well if we do. So we need to add specific logic to handle the extension (and truncation) case, but *only* where that extension or truncation are over bytes that *are outside the alloca's allocated storage* and thus totally bogus to load or store. And of course, once we add back this correct handling of extension or truncation, we need to correctly handle bigendian systems to avoid re-introducing the exact bug that started us off on this chain of misery in the first place, but this time even more subtle as it only happens along speculated loads atop a PHI node. I've ported an existing test for PHI speculation to the big-endian test file and checked that we get that part correct, and I've added several more interesting big-endian test cases that should help check that we're getting this correct. Fun times. llvm-svn: 242869
2015-07-22 11:32:42 +08:00
assert(!(isa<IntegerType>(OldTy) && isa<IntegerType>(NewTy)) &&
"Integer types must be the exact same to convert.");
// See if we need inttoptr for this type pair. A cast involving both scalars
// and vectors requires and additional bitcast.
if (OldTy->getScalarType()->isIntegerTy() &&
NewTy->getScalarType()->isPointerTy()) {
// Expand <2 x i32> to i8* --> <2 x i32> to i64 to i8*
if (OldTy->isVectorTy() && !NewTy->isVectorTy())
return IRB.CreateIntToPtr(IRB.CreateBitCast(V, DL.getIntPtrType(NewTy)),
NewTy);
// Expand i128 to <2 x i8*> --> i128 to <2 x i64> to <2 x i8*>
if (!OldTy->isVectorTy() && NewTy->isVectorTy())
return IRB.CreateIntToPtr(IRB.CreateBitCast(V, DL.getIntPtrType(NewTy)),
NewTy);
return IRB.CreateIntToPtr(V, NewTy);
}
// See if we need ptrtoint for this type pair. A cast involving both scalars
// and vectors requires and additional bitcast.
if (OldTy->getScalarType()->isPointerTy() &&
NewTy->getScalarType()->isIntegerTy()) {
// Expand <2 x i8*> to i128 --> <2 x i8*> to <2 x i64> to i128
if (OldTy->isVectorTy() && !NewTy->isVectorTy())
return IRB.CreateBitCast(IRB.CreatePtrToInt(V, DL.getIntPtrType(OldTy)),
NewTy);
// Expand i8* to <2 x i32> --> i8* to i64 to <2 x i32>
if (!OldTy->isVectorTy() && NewTy->isVectorTy())
return IRB.CreateBitCast(IRB.CreatePtrToInt(V, DL.getIntPtrType(OldTy)),
NewTy);
return IRB.CreatePtrToInt(V, NewTy);
}
return IRB.CreateBitCast(V, NewTy);
}
/// \brief Test whether the given slice use can be promoted to a vector.
///
/// This function is called to test each entry in a partition which is slated
/// for a single slice.
[PM] Port SROA to the new pass manager. In some ways this is a very boring port to the new pass manager as there are no interesting analyses or dependencies or other oddities. However, this does introduce the first good example of a transformation pass with non-trivial state porting to the new pass manager. I've tried to carve out patterns here to replicate elsewhere, and would appreciate comments on whether folks like these patterns: - A common need in the new pass manager is to effectively lift the pass class and some of its state into a public header file. Prior to this, LLVM used anonymous namespaces to provide "module private" types and utilities, but that doesn't scale to cases where a public header file is needed and the new pass manager will exacerbate that. The pattern I've adopted here is to use the namespace-cased-name of the core pass (what would be a module if we had them) as a module-private namespace. Then utility and other code can be declared and defined in this namespace. At some point in the future, we could even have (conditionally compiled) code that used modules features when available to do the same basic thing. - I've split the actual pass run method in two in order to expose a private method usable by the old pass manager to wrap the new class with a minimum of duplicated code. I actually looked at a bunch of ways to automate or generate these, but they are all quite terrible IMO. The fundamental need is to extract the set of analyses which need to cross this interface boundary, and that will end up being too unpredictable to effectively encapsulate IMO. This is also a relatively small amount of boiler plate that will live a relatively short time, so I'm not too worried about the fact that it is boiler plate. The rest of the patch is totally boring but results in a massive diff (sorry). It just moves code around and removes or adds qualifiers to reflect the new name and nesting structure. Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12773 llvm-svn: 247501
2015-09-12 17:09:14 +08:00
static bool isVectorPromotionViableForSlice(Partition &P, const Slice &S,
VectorType *Ty,
uint64_t ElementSize,
const DataLayout &DL) {
// First validate the slice offsets.
uint64_t BeginOffset =
std::max(S.beginOffset(), P.beginOffset()) - P.beginOffset();
uint64_t BeginIndex = BeginOffset / ElementSize;
if (BeginIndex * ElementSize != BeginOffset ||
BeginIndex >= Ty->getNumElements())
return false;
uint64_t EndOffset =
std::min(S.endOffset(), P.endOffset()) - P.beginOffset();
uint64_t EndIndex = EndOffset / ElementSize;
if (EndIndex * ElementSize != EndOffset || EndIndex > Ty->getNumElements())
return false;
assert(EndIndex > BeginIndex && "Empty vector!");
uint64_t NumElements = EndIndex - BeginIndex;
Type *SliceTy = (NumElements == 1)
? Ty->getElementType()
: VectorType::get(Ty->getElementType(), NumElements);
Type *SplitIntTy =
Type::getIntNTy(Ty->getContext(), NumElements * ElementSize * 8);
Use *U = S.getUse();
if (MemIntrinsic *MI = dyn_cast<MemIntrinsic>(U->getUser())) {
if (MI->isVolatile())
return false;
if (!S.isSplittable())
return false; // Skip any unsplittable intrinsics.
} else if (IntrinsicInst *II = dyn_cast<IntrinsicInst>(U->getUser())) {
if (II->getIntrinsicID() != Intrinsic::lifetime_start &&
II->getIntrinsicID() != Intrinsic::lifetime_end)
return false;
} else if (U->get()->getType()->getPointerElementType()->isStructTy()) {
// Disable vector promotion when there are loads or stores of an FCA.
return false;
} else if (LoadInst *LI = dyn_cast<LoadInst>(U->getUser())) {
if (LI->isVolatile())
return false;
Type *LTy = LI->getType();
if (P.beginOffset() > S.beginOffset() || P.endOffset() < S.endOffset()) {
assert(LTy->isIntegerTy());
LTy = SplitIntTy;
}
if (!canConvertValue(DL, SliceTy, LTy))
return false;
} else if (StoreInst *SI = dyn_cast<StoreInst>(U->getUser())) {
if (SI->isVolatile())
return false;
Type *STy = SI->getValueOperand()->getType();
if (P.beginOffset() > S.beginOffset() || P.endOffset() < S.endOffset()) {
assert(STy->isIntegerTy());
STy = SplitIntTy;
}
if (!canConvertValue(DL, STy, SliceTy))
return false;
} else {
return false;
}
return true;
}
/// \brief Test whether the given alloca partitioning and range of slices can be
/// promoted to a vector.
///
/// This is a quick test to check whether we can rewrite a particular alloca
/// partition (and its newly formed alloca) into a vector alloca with only
/// whole-vector loads and stores such that it could be promoted to a vector
/// SSA value. We only can ensure this for a limited set of operations, and we
/// don't want to do the rewrites unless we are confident that the result will
/// be promotable, so we have an early test here.
[PM] Port SROA to the new pass manager. In some ways this is a very boring port to the new pass manager as there are no interesting analyses or dependencies or other oddities. However, this does introduce the first good example of a transformation pass with non-trivial state porting to the new pass manager. I've tried to carve out patterns here to replicate elsewhere, and would appreciate comments on whether folks like these patterns: - A common need in the new pass manager is to effectively lift the pass class and some of its state into a public header file. Prior to this, LLVM used anonymous namespaces to provide "module private" types and utilities, but that doesn't scale to cases where a public header file is needed and the new pass manager will exacerbate that. The pattern I've adopted here is to use the namespace-cased-name of the core pass (what would be a module if we had them) as a module-private namespace. Then utility and other code can be declared and defined in this namespace. At some point in the future, we could even have (conditionally compiled) code that used modules features when available to do the same basic thing. - I've split the actual pass run method in two in order to expose a private method usable by the old pass manager to wrap the new class with a minimum of duplicated code. I actually looked at a bunch of ways to automate or generate these, but they are all quite terrible IMO. The fundamental need is to extract the set of analyses which need to cross this interface boundary, and that will end up being too unpredictable to effectively encapsulate IMO. This is also a relatively small amount of boiler plate that will live a relatively short time, so I'm not too worried about the fact that it is boiler plate. The rest of the patch is totally boring but results in a massive diff (sorry). It just moves code around and removes or adds qualifiers to reflect the new name and nesting structure. Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12773 llvm-svn: 247501
2015-09-12 17:09:14 +08:00
static VectorType *isVectorPromotionViable(Partition &P, const DataLayout &DL) {
// Collect the candidate types for vector-based promotion. Also track whether
// we have different element types.
SmallVector<VectorType *, 4> CandidateTys;
Type *CommonEltTy = nullptr;
bool HaveCommonEltTy = true;
auto CheckCandidateType = [&](Type *Ty) {
if (auto *VTy = dyn_cast<VectorType>(Ty)) {
CandidateTys.push_back(VTy);
if (!CommonEltTy)
CommonEltTy = VTy->getElementType();
else if (CommonEltTy != VTy->getElementType())
HaveCommonEltTy = false;
}
};
// Consider any loads or stores that are the exact size of the slice.
for (const Slice &S : P)
if (S.beginOffset() == P.beginOffset() &&
S.endOffset() == P.endOffset()) {
if (auto *LI = dyn_cast<LoadInst>(S.getUse()->getUser()))
CheckCandidateType(LI->getType());
else if (auto *SI = dyn_cast<StoreInst>(S.getUse()->getUser()))
CheckCandidateType(SI->getValueOperand()->getType());
}
// If we didn't find a vector type, nothing to do here.
if (CandidateTys.empty())
return nullptr;
// Remove non-integer vector types if we had multiple common element types.
// FIXME: It'd be nice to replace them with integer vector types, but we can't
// do that until all the backends are known to produce good code for all
// integer vector types.
if (!HaveCommonEltTy) {
CandidateTys.erase(std::remove_if(CandidateTys.begin(), CandidateTys.end(),
[](VectorType *VTy) {
return !VTy->getElementType()->isIntegerTy();
}),
CandidateTys.end());
// If there were no integer vector types, give up.
if (CandidateTys.empty())
return nullptr;
// Rank the remaining candidate vector types. This is easy because we know
// they're all integer vectors. We sort by ascending number of elements.
auto RankVectorTypes = [&DL](VectorType *RHSTy, VectorType *LHSTy) {
assert(DL.getTypeSizeInBits(RHSTy) == DL.getTypeSizeInBits(LHSTy) &&
"Cannot have vector types of different sizes!");
assert(RHSTy->getElementType()->isIntegerTy() &&
"All non-integer types eliminated!");
assert(LHSTy->getElementType()->isIntegerTy() &&
"All non-integer types eliminated!");
return RHSTy->getNumElements() < LHSTy->getNumElements();
};
std::sort(CandidateTys.begin(), CandidateTys.end(), RankVectorTypes);
CandidateTys.erase(
std::unique(CandidateTys.begin(), CandidateTys.end(), RankVectorTypes),
CandidateTys.end());
} else {
// The only way to have the same element type in every vector type is to
// have the same vector type. Check that and remove all but one.
#ifndef NDEBUG
for (VectorType *VTy : CandidateTys) {
assert(VTy->getElementType() == CommonEltTy &&
"Unaccounted for element type!");
assert(VTy == CandidateTys[0] &&
"Different vector types with the same element type!");
}
#endif
CandidateTys.resize(1);
}
// Try each vector type, and return the one which works.
auto CheckVectorTypeForPromotion = [&](VectorType *VTy) {
uint64_t ElementSize = DL.getTypeSizeInBits(VTy->getElementType());
// While the definition of LLVM vectors is bitpacked, we don't support sizes
// that aren't byte sized.
if (ElementSize % 8)
return false;
assert((DL.getTypeSizeInBits(VTy) % 8) == 0 &&
"vector size not a multiple of element size?");
ElementSize /= 8;
for (const Slice &S : P)
if (!isVectorPromotionViableForSlice(P, S, VTy, ElementSize, DL))
return false;
for (const Slice *S : P.splitSliceTails())
if (!isVectorPromotionViableForSlice(P, *S, VTy, ElementSize, DL))
return false;
return true;
};
for (VectorType *VTy : CandidateTys)
if (CheckVectorTypeForPromotion(VTy))
return VTy;
return nullptr;
}
Reimplement SROA yet again. Same fundamental principle, but a totally different core implementation strategy. Previously, SROA would build a relatively elaborate partitioning of an alloca, associate uses with each partition, and then rewrite the uses of each partition in an attempt to break apart the alloca into chunks that could be promoted. This was very wasteful in terms of memory and compile time because regardless of how complex the alloca or how much we're able to do in breaking it up, all of the datastructure work to analyze the partitioning was done up front. The new implementation attempts to form partitions of the alloca lazily and on the fly, rewriting the uses that make up that partition as it goes. This has a few significant effects: 1) Much simpler data structures are used throughout. 2) No more double walk of the recursive use graph of the alloca, only walk it once. 3) No more complex algorithms for associating a particular use with a particular partition. 4) PHI and Select speculation is simplified and happens lazily. 5) More precise information is available about a specific use of the alloca, removing the need for some side datastructures. Ultimately, I think this is a much better implementation. It removes about 300 lines of code, but arguably removes more like 500 considering that some code grew in the process of being factored apart and cleaned up for this all to work. I've re-used as much of the old implementation as possible, which includes the lion's share of code in the form of the rewriting logic. The interesting new logic centers around how the uses of a partition are sorted, and split into actual partitions. Each instruction using a pointer derived from the alloca gets a 'Partition' entry. This name is totally wrong, but I'll do a rename in a follow-up commit as there is already enough churn here. The entry describes the offset range accessed and the nature of the access. Once we have all of these entries we sort them in a very specific way: increasing order of begin offset, followed by whether they are splittable uses (memcpy, etc), followed by the end offset or whatever. Sorting by splittability is important as it simplifies the collection of uses into a partition. Once we have these uses sorted, we walk from the beginning to the end building up a range of uses that form a partition of the alloca. Overlapping unsplittable uses are merged into a single partition while splittable uses are broken apart and carried from one partition to the next. A partition is also introduced to bridge splittable uses between the unsplittable regions when necessary. I've looked at the performance PRs fairly closely. PR15471 no longer will even load (the module is invalid). Not sure what is up there. PR15412 improves by between 5% and 10%, however it is nearly impossible to know what is holding it up as SROA (the entire pass) takes less time than reading the IR for that test case. The analysis takes the same time as running mem2reg on the final allocas. I suspect (without much evidence) that the new implementation will scale much better however, and it is just the small nature of the test cases that makes the changes small and noisy. Either way, it is still simpler and cleaner I think. llvm-svn: 186316
2013-07-15 18:30:19 +08:00
/// \brief Test whether a slice of an alloca is valid for integer widening.
///
/// This implements the necessary checking for the \c isIntegerWideningViable
/// test below on a single slice of the alloca.
static bool isIntegerWideningViableForSlice(const Slice &S,
uint64_t AllocBeginOffset,
Type *AllocaTy,
const DataLayout &DL,
bool &WholeAllocaOp) {
uint64_t Size = DL.getTypeStoreSize(AllocaTy);
uint64_t RelBegin = S.beginOffset() - AllocBeginOffset;
uint64_t RelEnd = S.endOffset() - AllocBeginOffset;
// We can't reasonably handle cases where the load or store extends past
// the end of the alloca's type and into its padding.
if (RelEnd > Size)
return false;
Use *U = S.getUse();
if (LoadInst *LI = dyn_cast<LoadInst>(U->getUser())) {
if (LI->isVolatile())
Reimplement SROA yet again. Same fundamental principle, but a totally different core implementation strategy. Previously, SROA would build a relatively elaborate partitioning of an alloca, associate uses with each partition, and then rewrite the uses of each partition in an attempt to break apart the alloca into chunks that could be promoted. This was very wasteful in terms of memory and compile time because regardless of how complex the alloca or how much we're able to do in breaking it up, all of the datastructure work to analyze the partitioning was done up front. The new implementation attempts to form partitions of the alloca lazily and on the fly, rewriting the uses that make up that partition as it goes. This has a few significant effects: 1) Much simpler data structures are used throughout. 2) No more double walk of the recursive use graph of the alloca, only walk it once. 3) No more complex algorithms for associating a particular use with a particular partition. 4) PHI and Select speculation is simplified and happens lazily. 5) More precise information is available about a specific use of the alloca, removing the need for some side datastructures. Ultimately, I think this is a much better implementation. It removes about 300 lines of code, but arguably removes more like 500 considering that some code grew in the process of being factored apart and cleaned up for this all to work. I've re-used as much of the old implementation as possible, which includes the lion's share of code in the form of the rewriting logic. The interesting new logic centers around how the uses of a partition are sorted, and split into actual partitions. Each instruction using a pointer derived from the alloca gets a 'Partition' entry. This name is totally wrong, but I'll do a rename in a follow-up commit as there is already enough churn here. The entry describes the offset range accessed and the nature of the access. Once we have all of these entries we sort them in a very specific way: increasing order of begin offset, followed by whether they are splittable uses (memcpy, etc), followed by the end offset or whatever. Sorting by splittability is important as it simplifies the collection of uses into a partition. Once we have these uses sorted, we walk from the beginning to the end building up a range of uses that form a partition of the alloca. Overlapping unsplittable uses are merged into a single partition while splittable uses are broken apart and carried from one partition to the next. A partition is also introduced to bridge splittable uses between the unsplittable regions when necessary. I've looked at the performance PRs fairly closely. PR15471 no longer will even load (the module is invalid). Not sure what is up there. PR15412 improves by between 5% and 10%, however it is nearly impossible to know what is holding it up as SROA (the entire pass) takes less time than reading the IR for that test case. The analysis takes the same time as running mem2reg on the final allocas. I suspect (without much evidence) that the new implementation will scale much better however, and it is just the small nature of the test cases that makes the changes small and noisy. Either way, it is still simpler and cleaner I think. llvm-svn: 186316
2013-07-15 18:30:19 +08:00
return false;
[SROA] Fix a nasty pile of bugs to do with big-endian, different alloca types and loads, loads or stores widened past the size of an alloca, etc. This started off with a bug report about big-endian behavior with bitfields and loads and stores to a { i32, i24 } struct. An initial attempt to fix this was sent for review in D10357, but that didn't really get to the root of the problem. The core issue was that canConvertValue and convertValue in SROA were handling different bitwidth integers by doing a zext of the integer. It wouldn't do a trunc though, only a zext! This would in turn lead SROA to form an i24 load from an i24 alloca, zext it to i32, and then use it. This would at least produce the wrong value for big-endian systems. One of my many false starts here was to correct the computation for big-endian systems by shifting. But this doesn't actually work because the original code has a 64-bit store to the entire 8 bytes, and a 32-bit load of the last 4 bytes, and because the alloc size is 8 bytes, we can't lose that last (least significant if bigendian) byte! The real problem here is that we're forming an i24 load in SROA which is actually not sufficiently wide to load all of the necessary bits here. The source has an i32 load, and SROA needs to form that as well. The straightforward way to do this is to disable the zext logic in canConvertValue and convertValue, forcing us to actually load all 32-bits. This seems like a really good change, but it in turn breaks several other parts of SROA. First in the chain of knock-on failures, we had places where we were doing integer-widening promotion even though some of the integer loads or stores extended *past the end* of the alloca's memory! There was even a comment about preventing this, but it only prevented the case where the type had a different bit size from its store size. So I added checks to handle the cases where we actually have a widened load or store and to avoid trying to special integer widening promotion in those cases. Second, we actually rely on the ability to promote in the face of loads past the end of an alloca! This is important so that we can (for example) speculate loads around PHI nodes to do more promotion. The bits loaded are garbage, but as long as they aren't used and the alignment is suitable high (which it wasn't in the test case!) this is "fine". And we can't stop promoting here, lots of things stop working well if we do. So we need to add specific logic to handle the extension (and truncation) case, but *only* where that extension or truncation are over bytes that *are outside the alloca's allocated storage* and thus totally bogus to load or store. And of course, once we add back this correct handling of extension or truncation, we need to correctly handle bigendian systems to avoid re-introducing the exact bug that started us off on this chain of misery in the first place, but this time even more subtle as it only happens along speculated loads atop a PHI node. I've ported an existing test for PHI speculation to the big-endian test file and checked that we get that part correct, and I've added several more interesting big-endian test cases that should help check that we're getting this correct. Fun times. llvm-svn: 242869
2015-07-22 11:32:42 +08:00
// We can't handle loads that extend past the allocated memory.
if (DL.getTypeStoreSize(LI->getType()) > Size)
return false;
// Note that we don't count vector loads or stores as whole-alloca
// operations which enable integer widening because we would prefer to use
// vector widening instead.
if (!isa<VectorType>(LI->getType()) && RelBegin == 0 && RelEnd == Size)
WholeAllocaOp = true;
if (IntegerType *ITy = dyn_cast<IntegerType>(LI->getType())) {
if (ITy->getBitWidth() < DL.getTypeStoreSizeInBits(ITy))
return false;
} else if (RelBegin != 0 || RelEnd != Size ||
!canConvertValue(DL, AllocaTy, LI->getType())) {
// Non-integer loads need to be convertible from the alloca type so that
// they are promotable.
return false;
}
} else if (StoreInst *SI = dyn_cast<StoreInst>(U->getUser())) {
Type *ValueTy = SI->getValueOperand()->getType();
if (SI->isVolatile())
return false;
[SROA] Fix a nasty pile of bugs to do with big-endian, different alloca types and loads, loads or stores widened past the size of an alloca, etc. This started off with a bug report about big-endian behavior with bitfields and loads and stores to a { i32, i24 } struct. An initial attempt to fix this was sent for review in D10357, but that didn't really get to the root of the problem. The core issue was that canConvertValue and convertValue in SROA were handling different bitwidth integers by doing a zext of the integer. It wouldn't do a trunc though, only a zext! This would in turn lead SROA to form an i24 load from an i24 alloca, zext it to i32, and then use it. This would at least produce the wrong value for big-endian systems. One of my many false starts here was to correct the computation for big-endian systems by shifting. But this doesn't actually work because the original code has a 64-bit store to the entire 8 bytes, and a 32-bit load of the last 4 bytes, and because the alloc size is 8 bytes, we can't lose that last (least significant if bigendian) byte! The real problem here is that we're forming an i24 load in SROA which is actually not sufficiently wide to load all of the necessary bits here. The source has an i32 load, and SROA needs to form that as well. The straightforward way to do this is to disable the zext logic in canConvertValue and convertValue, forcing us to actually load all 32-bits. This seems like a really good change, but it in turn breaks several other parts of SROA. First in the chain of knock-on failures, we had places where we were doing integer-widening promotion even though some of the integer loads or stores extended *past the end* of the alloca's memory! There was even a comment about preventing this, but it only prevented the case where the type had a different bit size from its store size. So I added checks to handle the cases where we actually have a widened load or store and to avoid trying to special integer widening promotion in those cases. Second, we actually rely on the ability to promote in the face of loads past the end of an alloca! This is important so that we can (for example) speculate loads around PHI nodes to do more promotion. The bits loaded are garbage, but as long as they aren't used and the alignment is suitable high (which it wasn't in the test case!) this is "fine". And we can't stop promoting here, lots of things stop working well if we do. So we need to add specific logic to handle the extension (and truncation) case, but *only* where that extension or truncation are over bytes that *are outside the alloca's allocated storage* and thus totally bogus to load or store. And of course, once we add back this correct handling of extension or truncation, we need to correctly handle bigendian systems to avoid re-introducing the exact bug that started us off on this chain of misery in the first place, but this time even more subtle as it only happens along speculated loads atop a PHI node. I've ported an existing test for PHI speculation to the big-endian test file and checked that we get that part correct, and I've added several more interesting big-endian test cases that should help check that we're getting this correct. Fun times. llvm-svn: 242869
2015-07-22 11:32:42 +08:00
// We can't handle stores that extend past the allocated memory.
if (DL.getTypeStoreSize(ValueTy) > Size)
return false;
// Note that we don't count vector loads or stores as whole-alloca
// operations which enable integer widening because we would prefer to use
// vector widening instead.
if (!isa<VectorType>(ValueTy) && RelBegin == 0 && RelEnd == Size)
WholeAllocaOp = true;
if (IntegerType *ITy = dyn_cast<IntegerType>(ValueTy)) {
if (ITy->getBitWidth() < DL.getTypeStoreSizeInBits(ITy))
return false;
} else if (RelBegin != 0 || RelEnd != Size ||
!canConvertValue(DL, ValueTy, AllocaTy)) {
// Non-integer stores need to be convertible to the alloca type so that
// they are promotable.
return false;
}
} else if (MemIntrinsic *MI = dyn_cast<MemIntrinsic>(U->getUser())) {
if (MI->isVolatile() || !isa<Constant>(MI->getLength()))
return false;
if (!S.isSplittable())
return false; // Skip any unsplittable intrinsics.
} else if (IntrinsicInst *II = dyn_cast<IntrinsicInst>(U->getUser())) {
if (II->getIntrinsicID() != Intrinsic::lifetime_start &&
II->getIntrinsicID() != Intrinsic::lifetime_end)
return false;
} else {
return false;
}
return true;
}
First major step toward addressing PR14059. This teaches SROA to handle cases where we have partial integer loads and stores to an otherwise promotable alloca to widen[1] those loads and stores to cover the entire alloca and bitcast them into the appropriate type such that promotion can proceed. These partial loads and stores stem from an annoying confluence of ARM's calling convention and ABI lowering and the FCA pre-splitting which takes place in SROA. Clang lowers a { double, double } in-register function argument as a [4 x i32] function argument to ensure it is placed into integer 32-bit registers (a really unnerving implicit contract between Clang and the ARM backend I would add). This results in a FCA load of [4 x i32]* from the { double, double } alloca, and SROA decomposes this into a sequence of i32 loads and stores. Inlining proceeds, code gets folded, but at the end of the day, we still have i32 stores to the low and high halves of a double alloca. Widening these to be i64 operations, and bitcasting them to double prior to loading or storing allows promotion to proceed for these allocas. I looked quite a bit changing the IR which Clang produces for this case to be more friendly, but small changes seem unlikely to help. I think the best representation we could use currently would be to pass 4 i32 arguments thereby avoiding any FCAs, but that would still require this fix. It seems like it might eventually be nice to somehow encode the ABI register selection choices outside of the parameter type system so that the parameter can be a { double, double }, but the CC register annotations indicate that this should be passed via 4 integer registers. This patch does not address the second problem in PR14059, which is the reverse: when a struct alloca is loaded as a *larger* single integer. This patch also does not address some of the code quality issues with the FCA-splitting. Those don't actually impede any optimizations really, but they're on my list to clean up. [1]: Pedantic footnote: for those concerned about memory model issues here, this is safe. For the alloca to be promotable, it cannot escape or have any use of its address that could allow these loads or stores to be racing. Thus, widening is always safe. llvm-svn: 165928
2012-10-15 16:40:30 +08:00
/// \brief Test whether the given alloca partition's integer operations can be
/// widened to promotable ones.
///
First major step toward addressing PR14059. This teaches SROA to handle cases where we have partial integer loads and stores to an otherwise promotable alloca to widen[1] those loads and stores to cover the entire alloca and bitcast them into the appropriate type such that promotion can proceed. These partial loads and stores stem from an annoying confluence of ARM's calling convention and ABI lowering and the FCA pre-splitting which takes place in SROA. Clang lowers a { double, double } in-register function argument as a [4 x i32] function argument to ensure it is placed into integer 32-bit registers (a really unnerving implicit contract between Clang and the ARM backend I would add). This results in a FCA load of [4 x i32]* from the { double, double } alloca, and SROA decomposes this into a sequence of i32 loads and stores. Inlining proceeds, code gets folded, but at the end of the day, we still have i32 stores to the low and high halves of a double alloca. Widening these to be i64 operations, and bitcasting them to double prior to loading or storing allows promotion to proceed for these allocas. I looked quite a bit changing the IR which Clang produces for this case to be more friendly, but small changes seem unlikely to help. I think the best representation we could use currently would be to pass 4 i32 arguments thereby avoiding any FCAs, but that would still require this fix. It seems like it might eventually be nice to somehow encode the ABI register selection choices outside of the parameter type system so that the parameter can be a { double, double }, but the CC register annotations indicate that this should be passed via 4 integer registers. This patch does not address the second problem in PR14059, which is the reverse: when a struct alloca is loaded as a *larger* single integer. This patch also does not address some of the code quality issues with the FCA-splitting. Those don't actually impede any optimizations really, but they're on my list to clean up. [1]: Pedantic footnote: for those concerned about memory model issues here, this is safe. For the alloca to be promotable, it cannot escape or have any use of its address that could allow these loads or stores to be racing. Thus, widening is always safe. llvm-svn: 165928
2012-10-15 16:40:30 +08:00
/// This is a quick test to check whether we can rewrite the integer loads and
/// stores to a particular alloca into wider loads and stores and be able to
/// promote the resulting alloca.
[PM] Port SROA to the new pass manager. In some ways this is a very boring port to the new pass manager as there are no interesting analyses or dependencies or other oddities. However, this does introduce the first good example of a transformation pass with non-trivial state porting to the new pass manager. I've tried to carve out patterns here to replicate elsewhere, and would appreciate comments on whether folks like these patterns: - A common need in the new pass manager is to effectively lift the pass class and some of its state into a public header file. Prior to this, LLVM used anonymous namespaces to provide "module private" types and utilities, but that doesn't scale to cases where a public header file is needed and the new pass manager will exacerbate that. The pattern I've adopted here is to use the namespace-cased-name of the core pass (what would be a module if we had them) as a module-private namespace. Then utility and other code can be declared and defined in this namespace. At some point in the future, we could even have (conditionally compiled) code that used modules features when available to do the same basic thing. - I've split the actual pass run method in two in order to expose a private method usable by the old pass manager to wrap the new class with a minimum of duplicated code. I actually looked at a bunch of ways to automate or generate these, but they are all quite terrible IMO. The fundamental need is to extract the set of analyses which need to cross this interface boundary, and that will end up being too unpredictable to effectively encapsulate IMO. This is also a relatively small amount of boiler plate that will live a relatively short time, so I'm not too worried about the fact that it is boiler plate. The rest of the patch is totally boring but results in a massive diff (sorry). It just moves code around and removes or adds qualifiers to reflect the new name and nesting structure. Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12773 llvm-svn: 247501
2015-09-12 17:09:14 +08:00
static bool isIntegerWideningViable(Partition &P, Type *AllocaTy,
const DataLayout &DL) {
uint64_t SizeInBits = DL.getTypeSizeInBits(AllocaTy);
// Don't create integer types larger than the maximum bitwidth.
if (SizeInBits > IntegerType::MAX_INT_BITS)
return false;
First major step toward addressing PR14059. This teaches SROA to handle cases where we have partial integer loads and stores to an otherwise promotable alloca to widen[1] those loads and stores to cover the entire alloca and bitcast them into the appropriate type such that promotion can proceed. These partial loads and stores stem from an annoying confluence of ARM's calling convention and ABI lowering and the FCA pre-splitting which takes place in SROA. Clang lowers a { double, double } in-register function argument as a [4 x i32] function argument to ensure it is placed into integer 32-bit registers (a really unnerving implicit contract between Clang and the ARM backend I would add). This results in a FCA load of [4 x i32]* from the { double, double } alloca, and SROA decomposes this into a sequence of i32 loads and stores. Inlining proceeds, code gets folded, but at the end of the day, we still have i32 stores to the low and high halves of a double alloca. Widening these to be i64 operations, and bitcasting them to double prior to loading or storing allows promotion to proceed for these allocas. I looked quite a bit changing the IR which Clang produces for this case to be more friendly, but small changes seem unlikely to help. I think the best representation we could use currently would be to pass 4 i32 arguments thereby avoiding any FCAs, but that would still require this fix. It seems like it might eventually be nice to somehow encode the ABI register selection choices outside of the parameter type system so that the parameter can be a { double, double }, but the CC register annotations indicate that this should be passed via 4 integer registers. This patch does not address the second problem in PR14059, which is the reverse: when a struct alloca is loaded as a *larger* single integer. This patch also does not address some of the code quality issues with the FCA-splitting. Those don't actually impede any optimizations really, but they're on my list to clean up. [1]: Pedantic footnote: for those concerned about memory model issues here, this is safe. For the alloca to be promotable, it cannot escape or have any use of its address that could allow these loads or stores to be racing. Thus, widening is always safe. llvm-svn: 165928
2012-10-15 16:40:30 +08:00
// Don't try to handle allocas with bit-padding.
if (SizeInBits != DL.getTypeStoreSizeInBits(AllocaTy))
return false;
// We need to ensure that an integer type with the appropriate bitwidth can
// be converted to the alloca type, whatever that is. We don't want to force
// the alloca itself to have an integer type if there is a more suitable one.
Type *IntTy = Type::getIntNTy(AllocaTy->getContext(), SizeInBits);
if (!canConvertValue(DL, AllocaTy, IntTy) ||
!canConvertValue(DL, IntTy, AllocaTy))
return false;
// While examining uses, we ensure that the alloca has a covering load or
// store. We don't want to widen the integer operations only to fail to
// promote due to some other unsplittable entry (which we may make splittable
// later). However, if there are only splittable uses, go ahead and assume
// that we cover the alloca.
// FIXME: We shouldn't consider split slices that happen to start in the
// partition here...
bool WholeAllocaOp =
P.begin() != P.end() ? false : DL.isLegalInteger(SizeInBits);
for (const Slice &S : P)
if (!isIntegerWideningViableForSlice(S, P.beginOffset(), AllocaTy, DL,
WholeAllocaOp))
return false;
Reimplement SROA yet again. Same fundamental principle, but a totally different core implementation strategy. Previously, SROA would build a relatively elaborate partitioning of an alloca, associate uses with each partition, and then rewrite the uses of each partition in an attempt to break apart the alloca into chunks that could be promoted. This was very wasteful in terms of memory and compile time because regardless of how complex the alloca or how much we're able to do in breaking it up, all of the datastructure work to analyze the partitioning was done up front. The new implementation attempts to form partitions of the alloca lazily and on the fly, rewriting the uses that make up that partition as it goes. This has a few significant effects: 1) Much simpler data structures are used throughout. 2) No more double walk of the recursive use graph of the alloca, only walk it once. 3) No more complex algorithms for associating a particular use with a particular partition. 4) PHI and Select speculation is simplified and happens lazily. 5) More precise information is available about a specific use of the alloca, removing the need for some side datastructures. Ultimately, I think this is a much better implementation. It removes about 300 lines of code, but arguably removes more like 500 considering that some code grew in the process of being factored apart and cleaned up for this all to work. I've re-used as much of the old implementation as possible, which includes the lion's share of code in the form of the rewriting logic. The interesting new logic centers around how the uses of a partition are sorted, and split into actual partitions. Each instruction using a pointer derived from the alloca gets a 'Partition' entry. This name is totally wrong, but I'll do a rename in a follow-up commit as there is already enough churn here. The entry describes the offset range accessed and the nature of the access. Once we have all of these entries we sort them in a very specific way: increasing order of begin offset, followed by whether they are splittable uses (memcpy, etc), followed by the end offset or whatever. Sorting by splittability is important as it simplifies the collection of uses into a partition. Once we have these uses sorted, we walk from the beginning to the end building up a range of uses that form a partition of the alloca. Overlapping unsplittable uses are merged into a single partition while splittable uses are broken apart and carried from one partition to the next. A partition is also introduced to bridge splittable uses between the unsplittable regions when necessary. I've looked at the performance PRs fairly closely. PR15471 no longer will even load (the module is invalid). Not sure what is up there. PR15412 improves by between 5% and 10%, however it is nearly impossible to know what is holding it up as SROA (the entire pass) takes less time than reading the IR for that test case. The analysis takes the same time as running mem2reg on the final allocas. I suspect (without much evidence) that the new implementation will scale much better however, and it is just the small nature of the test cases that makes the changes small and noisy. Either way, it is still simpler and cleaner I think. llvm-svn: 186316
2013-07-15 18:30:19 +08:00
for (const Slice *S : P.splitSliceTails())
if (!isIntegerWideningViableForSlice(*S, P.beginOffset(), AllocaTy, DL,
WholeAllocaOp))
return false;
return WholeAllocaOp;
}
static Value *extractInteger(const DataLayout &DL, IRBuilderTy &IRB, Value *V,
IntegerType *Ty, uint64_t Offset,
const Twine &Name) {
DEBUG(dbgs() << " start: " << *V << "\n");
IntegerType *IntTy = cast<IntegerType>(V->getType());
assert(DL.getTypeStoreSize(Ty) + Offset <= DL.getTypeStoreSize(IntTy) &&
"Element extends past full value");
uint64_t ShAmt = 8 * Offset;
if (DL.isBigEndian())
ShAmt = 8 * (DL.getTypeStoreSize(IntTy) - DL.getTypeStoreSize(Ty) - Offset);
if (ShAmt) {
V = IRB.CreateLShr(V, ShAmt, Name + ".shift");
DEBUG(dbgs() << " shifted: " << *V << "\n");
}
assert(Ty->getBitWidth() <= IntTy->getBitWidth() &&
"Cannot extract to a larger integer!");
if (Ty != IntTy) {
V = IRB.CreateTrunc(V, Ty, Name + ".trunc");
DEBUG(dbgs() << " trunced: " << *V << "\n");
}
return V;
}
static Value *insertInteger(const DataLayout &DL, IRBuilderTy &IRB, Value *Old,
Value *V, uint64_t Offset, const Twine &Name) {
IntegerType *IntTy = cast<IntegerType>(Old->getType());
IntegerType *Ty = cast<IntegerType>(V->getType());
assert(Ty->getBitWidth() <= IntTy->getBitWidth() &&
"Cannot insert a larger integer!");
DEBUG(dbgs() << " start: " << *V << "\n");
if (Ty != IntTy) {
V = IRB.CreateZExt(V, IntTy, Name + ".ext");
DEBUG(dbgs() << " extended: " << *V << "\n");
}
assert(DL.getTypeStoreSize(Ty) + Offset <= DL.getTypeStoreSize(IntTy) &&
"Element store outside of alloca store");
uint64_t ShAmt = 8 * Offset;
if (DL.isBigEndian())
ShAmt = 8 * (DL.getTypeStoreSize(IntTy) - DL.getTypeStoreSize(Ty) - Offset);
if (ShAmt) {
V = IRB.CreateShl(V, ShAmt, Name + ".shift");
DEBUG(dbgs() << " shifted: " << *V << "\n");
}
if (ShAmt || Ty->getBitWidth() < IntTy->getBitWidth()) {
APInt Mask = ~Ty->getMask().zext(IntTy->getBitWidth()).shl(ShAmt);
Old = IRB.CreateAnd(Old, Mask, Name + ".mask");
DEBUG(dbgs() << " masked: " << *Old << "\n");
V = IRB.CreateOr(Old, V, Name + ".insert");
DEBUG(dbgs() << " inserted: " << *V << "\n");
}
return V;
}
static Value *extractVector(IRBuilderTy &IRB, Value *V, unsigned BeginIndex,
unsigned EndIndex, const Twine &Name) {
VectorType *VecTy = cast<VectorType>(V->getType());
unsigned NumElements = EndIndex - BeginIndex;
assert(NumElements <= VecTy->getNumElements() && "Too many elements!");
if (NumElements == VecTy->getNumElements())
return V;
if (NumElements == 1) {
V = IRB.CreateExtractElement(V, IRB.getInt32(BeginIndex),
Name + ".extract");
DEBUG(dbgs() << " extract: " << *V << "\n");
return V;
}
SmallVector<Constant *, 8> Mask;
Mask.reserve(NumElements);
for (unsigned i = BeginIndex; i != EndIndex; ++i)
Mask.push_back(IRB.getInt32(i));
V = IRB.CreateShuffleVector(V, UndefValue::get(V->getType()),
ConstantVector::get(Mask), Name + ".extract");
DEBUG(dbgs() << " shuffle: " << *V << "\n");
return V;
}
static Value *insertVector(IRBuilderTy &IRB, Value *Old, Value *V,
unsigned BeginIndex, const Twine &Name) {
VectorType *VecTy = cast<VectorType>(Old->getType());
assert(VecTy && "Can only insert a vector into a vector");
VectorType *Ty = dyn_cast<VectorType>(V->getType());
if (!Ty) {
// Single element to insert.
V = IRB.CreateInsertElement(Old, V, IRB.getInt32(BeginIndex),
Name + ".insert");
DEBUG(dbgs() << " insert: " << *V << "\n");
return V;
}
assert(Ty->getNumElements() <= VecTy->getNumElements() &&
"Too many elements!");
if (Ty->getNumElements() == VecTy->getNumElements()) {
assert(V->getType() == VecTy && "Vector type mismatch");
return V;
}
unsigned EndIndex = BeginIndex + Ty->getNumElements();
// When inserting a smaller vector into the larger to store, we first
// use a shuffle vector to widen it with undef elements, and then
// a second shuffle vector to select between the loaded vector and the
// incoming vector.
SmallVector<Constant *, 8> Mask;
Mask.reserve(VecTy->getNumElements());
for (unsigned i = 0; i != VecTy->getNumElements(); ++i)
if (i >= BeginIndex && i < EndIndex)
Mask.push_back(IRB.getInt32(i - BeginIndex));
else
Mask.push_back(UndefValue::get(IRB.getInt32Ty()));
V = IRB.CreateShuffleVector(V, UndefValue::get(V->getType()),
ConstantVector::get(Mask), Name + ".expand");
DEBUG(dbgs() << " shuffle: " << *V << "\n");
Mask.clear();
for (unsigned i = 0; i != VecTy->getNumElements(); ++i)
Mask.push_back(IRB.getInt1(i >= BeginIndex && i < EndIndex));
V = IRB.CreateSelect(ConstantVector::get(Mask), V, Old, Name + "blend");
DEBUG(dbgs() << " blend: " << *V << "\n");
return V;
}
/// \brief Visitor to rewrite instructions using p particular slice of an alloca
/// to use a new alloca.
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
///
/// Also implements the rewriting to vector-based accesses when the partition
/// passes the isVectorPromotionViable predicate. Most of the rewriting logic
/// lives here.
[PM] Port SROA to the new pass manager. In some ways this is a very boring port to the new pass manager as there are no interesting analyses or dependencies or other oddities. However, this does introduce the first good example of a transformation pass with non-trivial state porting to the new pass manager. I've tried to carve out patterns here to replicate elsewhere, and would appreciate comments on whether folks like these patterns: - A common need in the new pass manager is to effectively lift the pass class and some of its state into a public header file. Prior to this, LLVM used anonymous namespaces to provide "module private" types and utilities, but that doesn't scale to cases where a public header file is needed and the new pass manager will exacerbate that. The pattern I've adopted here is to use the namespace-cased-name of the core pass (what would be a module if we had them) as a module-private namespace. Then utility and other code can be declared and defined in this namespace. At some point in the future, we could even have (conditionally compiled) code that used modules features when available to do the same basic thing. - I've split the actual pass run method in two in order to expose a private method usable by the old pass manager to wrap the new class with a minimum of duplicated code. I actually looked at a bunch of ways to automate or generate these, but they are all quite terrible IMO. The fundamental need is to extract the set of analyses which need to cross this interface boundary, and that will end up being too unpredictable to effectively encapsulate IMO. This is also a relatively small amount of boiler plate that will live a relatively short time, so I'm not too worried about the fact that it is boiler plate. The rest of the patch is totally boring but results in a massive diff (sorry). It just moves code around and removes or adds qualifiers to reflect the new name and nesting structure. Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12773 llvm-svn: 247501
2015-09-12 17:09:14 +08:00
class llvm::sroa::AllocaSliceRewriter
: public InstVisitor<AllocaSliceRewriter, bool> {
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// Befriend the base class so it can delegate to private visit methods.
friend class llvm::InstVisitor<AllocaSliceRewriter, bool>;
typedef llvm::InstVisitor<AllocaSliceRewriter, bool> Base;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
const DataLayout &DL;
AllocaSlices &AS;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
SROA &Pass;
AllocaInst &OldAI, &NewAI;
const uint64_t NewAllocaBeginOffset, NewAllocaEndOffset;
Type *NewAllocaTy;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// This is a convenience and flag variable that will be null unless the new
// alloca's integer operations should be widened to this integer type due to
// passing isIntegerWideningViable above. If it is non-null, the desired
// integer type will be stored here for easy access during rewriting.
IntegerType *IntTy;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// If we are rewriting an alloca partition which can be written as pure
// vector operations, we stash extra information here. When VecTy is
2013-02-20 06:02:21 +08:00
// non-null, we have some strict guarantees about the rewritten alloca:
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// - The new alloca is exactly the size of the vector type here.
// - The accesses all either map to the entire vector or to a single
// element.
// - The set of accessing instructions is only one of those handled above
// in isVectorPromotionViable. Generally these are the same access kinds
// which are promotable via mem2reg.
VectorType *VecTy;
Type *ElementTy;
uint64_t ElementSize;
// The original offset of the slice currently being rewritten relative to
// the original alloca.
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
uint64_t BeginOffset, EndOffset;
// The new offsets of the slice currently being rewritten relative to the
// original alloca.
uint64_t NewBeginOffset, NewEndOffset;
uint64_t SliceSize;
bool IsSplittable;
PR14972: SROA vs. GVN exposed a really bad bug in SROA. The fundamental problem is that SROA didn't allow for overly wide loads where the bits past the end of the alloca were masked away and the load was sufficiently aligned to ensure there is no risk of page fault, or other trapping behavior. With such widened loads, SROA would delete the load entirely rather than clamping it to the size of the alloca in order to allow mem2reg to fire. This was exposed by a test case that neatly arranged for GVN to run first, widening certain loads, followed by an inline step, and then SROA which miscompiles the code. However, I see no reason why this hasn't been plaguing us in other contexts. It seems deeply broken. Diagnosing all of the above took all of 10 minutes of debugging. The really annoying aspect is that fixing this completely breaks the pass. ;] There was an implicit reliance on the fact that no loads or stores extended past the alloca once we decided to rewrite them in the final stage of SROA. This was used to encode information about whether the loads and stores had been split across multiple partitions of the original alloca. That required threading explicit tracking of whether a *use* of a partition is split across multiple partitions. Once that was done, another problem arose: we allowed splitting of integer loads and stores iff they were loads and stores to the entire alloca. This is a really arbitrary limitation, and splitting at least some integer loads and stores is crucial to maximize promotion opportunities. My first attempt was to start removing the restriction entirely, but currently that does Very Bad Things by causing *many* common alloca patterns to be fully decomposed into i8 operations and lots of or-ing together to produce larger integers on demand. The code bloat is terrifying. That is still the right end-goal, but substantial work must be done to either merge partitions or ensure that small i8 values are eagerly merged in some other pass. Sadly, figuring all this out took essentially all the time and effort here. So the end result is that we allow splitting only when the load or store at least covers the alloca. That ensures widened loads and stores don't hurt SROA, and that we don't rampantly decompose operations more than we have previously. All of this was already fairly well tested, and so I've just updated the tests to cover the wide load behavior. I can add a test that crafts the pass ordering magic which caused the original PR, but that seems really brittle and to provide little benefit. The fundamental problem is that widened loads should Just Work. llvm-svn: 177055
2013-03-14 19:32:24 +08:00
bool IsSplit;
Refactor the PartitionUse structure to actually use the Use* instead of a pair of instructions, one for the used pointer and the second for the user. This simplifies the representation and also makes it more dense. This was noticed because of the miscompile in PR13926. In that case, we were running up against a fundamental "bad idea" in the speculation of PHI and select instructions: the speculation and rewriting are interleaved, which requires phi speculation to also perform load rewriting! This is bad, and causes us to miss opportunities to do (for example) vector rewriting only exposed after PHI speculation, etc etc. It also, in the old system, required us to insert *new* load uses into the current partition's use list, which would then be ignored during rewriting because we had already extracted an end iterator for the use list. The appending behavior (and much of the other oddities) stem from the strange de-duplication strategy in the PartitionUse builder. Amusingly, all this went without notice for so long because it could only be triggered by having *different* GEPs into the same partition of the same alloca, where both different GEPs were operands of a single PHI, and where the GEP which was not encountered first also had multiple uses within that same PHI node... Hence the insane steps required to reproduce. So, step one in fixing this fundamental bad idea is to make the PartitionUse actually contain a Use*, and to make the builder do proper deduplication instead of funky de-duplication. This is enough to remove the appending behavior, and fix the miscompile in PR13926, but there is more work to be done here. Subsequent commits will lift the speculation into its own visitor. It'll be a useful step toward potentially extracting all of the speculation logic into a generic utility transform. The existing PHI test case for repeated operands has been made more extreme to catch even these issues. This test case, run through the old pass, will exactly reproduce the miscompile from PR13926. ;] We were so close here! llvm-svn: 164925
2012-10-01 09:49:22 +08:00
Use *OldUse;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
Instruction *OldPtr;
[SROA] Fix another instability in SROA with respect to the slice ordering. The fundamental problem that we're hitting here is that the use-def chain ordering is *itself* not a stable thing to be relying on in the rewriting for SROA. Further, we use a non-stable sort over the slices to arrange them based on the section of the alloca they're operating on. With a debugging STL implementation (or different implementations in stage2 and stage3) this can cause stage2 != stage3. The specific aspect of this problem fixed in this commit deals with the rewriting and load-speculation around PHIs and Selects. This, like many other aspects of the use-rewriting in SROA, is really part of the "strong SSA-formation" that is doen by SROA where it works very hard to canonicalize loads and stores in *just* the right way to satisfy the needs of mem2reg[1]. When we have a select (or a PHI) with 2 uses of the same alloca, we test that loads downstream of the select are speculatable around it twice. If only one of the operands to the select needs to be rewritten, then if we get lucky we rewrite that one first and the select is immediately speculatable. This can cause the order of operand visitation, and thus the order of slices to be rewritten, to change an alloca from promotable to non-promotable and vice versa. The fix is to defer all of the speculation until *after* the rewrite phase is done. Once we've rewritten everything, we can accurately test for whether speculation will work (once, instead of twice!) and the order ceases to matter. This also happens to simplify the other subtlety of speculation -- we need to *not* speculate anything unless the result of speculating will make the alloca fully promotable by mem2reg. I had a previous attempt at simplifying this, but it was still pretty horrible. There is actually already a *really* nice test case for this in basictest.ll, but on multiple STL implementations and inputs, we just got "lucky". Fortunately, the test case is very small and we can essentially build it in exactly the opposite way to get reasonable coverage in both directions even from normal STL implementations. llvm-svn: 202092
2014-02-25 08:07:09 +08:00
// Track post-rewrite users which are PHI nodes and Selects.
SmallPtrSetImpl<PHINode *> &PHIUsers;
SmallPtrSetImpl<SelectInst *> &SelectUsers;
// Utility IR builder, whose name prefix is setup for each visited use, and
// the insertion point is set to point to the user.
IRBuilderTy IRB;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
public:
AllocaSliceRewriter(const DataLayout &DL, AllocaSlices &AS, SROA &Pass,
AllocaInst &OldAI, AllocaInst &NewAI,
uint64_t NewAllocaBeginOffset,
uint64_t NewAllocaEndOffset, bool IsIntegerPromotable,
VectorType *PromotableVecTy,
[SROA] Fix another instability in SROA with respect to the slice ordering. The fundamental problem that we're hitting here is that the use-def chain ordering is *itself* not a stable thing to be relying on in the rewriting for SROA. Further, we use a non-stable sort over the slices to arrange them based on the section of the alloca they're operating on. With a debugging STL implementation (or different implementations in stage2 and stage3) this can cause stage2 != stage3. The specific aspect of this problem fixed in this commit deals with the rewriting and load-speculation around PHIs and Selects. This, like many other aspects of the use-rewriting in SROA, is really part of the "strong SSA-formation" that is doen by SROA where it works very hard to canonicalize loads and stores in *just* the right way to satisfy the needs of mem2reg[1]. When we have a select (or a PHI) with 2 uses of the same alloca, we test that loads downstream of the select are speculatable around it twice. If only one of the operands to the select needs to be rewritten, then if we get lucky we rewrite that one first and the select is immediately speculatable. This can cause the order of operand visitation, and thus the order of slices to be rewritten, to change an alloca from promotable to non-promotable and vice versa. The fix is to defer all of the speculation until *after* the rewrite phase is done. Once we've rewritten everything, we can accurately test for whether speculation will work (once, instead of twice!) and the order ceases to matter. This also happens to simplify the other subtlety of speculation -- we need to *not* speculate anything unless the result of speculating will make the alloca fully promotable by mem2reg. I had a previous attempt at simplifying this, but it was still pretty horrible. There is actually already a *really* nice test case for this in basictest.ll, but on multiple STL implementations and inputs, we just got "lucky". Fortunately, the test case is very small and we can essentially build it in exactly the opposite way to get reasonable coverage in both directions even from normal STL implementations. llvm-svn: 202092
2014-02-25 08:07:09 +08:00
SmallPtrSetImpl<PHINode *> &PHIUsers,
SmallPtrSetImpl<SelectInst *> &SelectUsers)
: DL(DL), AS(AS), Pass(Pass), OldAI(OldAI), NewAI(NewAI),
NewAllocaBeginOffset(NewAllocaBeginOffset),
NewAllocaEndOffset(NewAllocaEndOffset),
NewAllocaTy(NewAI.getAllocatedType()),
IntTy(IsIntegerPromotable
? Type::getIntNTy(
NewAI.getContext(),
DL.getTypeSizeInBits(NewAI.getAllocatedType()))
: nullptr),
VecTy(PromotableVecTy),
ElementTy(VecTy ? VecTy->getElementType() : nullptr),
ElementSize(VecTy ? DL.getTypeSizeInBits(ElementTy) / 8 : 0),
BeginOffset(), EndOffset(), IsSplittable(), IsSplit(), OldUse(),
[SROA] Fix another instability in SROA with respect to the slice ordering. The fundamental problem that we're hitting here is that the use-def chain ordering is *itself* not a stable thing to be relying on in the rewriting for SROA. Further, we use a non-stable sort over the slices to arrange them based on the section of the alloca they're operating on. With a debugging STL implementation (or different implementations in stage2 and stage3) this can cause stage2 != stage3. The specific aspect of this problem fixed in this commit deals with the rewriting and load-speculation around PHIs and Selects. This, like many other aspects of the use-rewriting in SROA, is really part of the "strong SSA-formation" that is doen by SROA where it works very hard to canonicalize loads and stores in *just* the right way to satisfy the needs of mem2reg[1]. When we have a select (or a PHI) with 2 uses of the same alloca, we test that loads downstream of the select are speculatable around it twice. If only one of the operands to the select needs to be rewritten, then if we get lucky we rewrite that one first and the select is immediately speculatable. This can cause the order of operand visitation, and thus the order of slices to be rewritten, to change an alloca from promotable to non-promotable and vice versa. The fix is to defer all of the speculation until *after* the rewrite phase is done. Once we've rewritten everything, we can accurately test for whether speculation will work (once, instead of twice!) and the order ceases to matter. This also happens to simplify the other subtlety of speculation -- we need to *not* speculate anything unless the result of speculating will make the alloca fully promotable by mem2reg. I had a previous attempt at simplifying this, but it was still pretty horrible. There is actually already a *really* nice test case for this in basictest.ll, but on multiple STL implementations and inputs, we just got "lucky". Fortunately, the test case is very small and we can essentially build it in exactly the opposite way to get reasonable coverage in both directions even from normal STL implementations. llvm-svn: 202092
2014-02-25 08:07:09 +08:00
OldPtr(), PHIUsers(PHIUsers), SelectUsers(SelectUsers),
IRB(NewAI.getContext(), ConstantFolder()) {
if (VecTy) {
assert((DL.getTypeSizeInBits(ElementTy) % 8) == 0 &&
"Only multiple-of-8 sized vector elements are viable");
++NumVectorized;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
assert((!IntTy && !VecTy) || (IntTy && !VecTy) || (!IntTy && VecTy));
}
bool visit(AllocaSlices::const_iterator I) {
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
bool CanSROA = true;
BeginOffset = I->beginOffset();
EndOffset = I->endOffset();
IsSplittable = I->isSplittable();
IsSplit =
BeginOffset < NewAllocaBeginOffset || EndOffset > NewAllocaEndOffset;
DEBUG(dbgs() << " rewriting " << (IsSplit ? "split " : ""));
DEBUG(AS.printSlice(dbgs(), I, ""));
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
DEBUG(dbgs() << "\n");
// Compute the intersecting offset range.
assert(BeginOffset < NewAllocaEndOffset);
assert(EndOffset > NewAllocaBeginOffset);
NewBeginOffset = std::max(BeginOffset, NewAllocaBeginOffset);
NewEndOffset = std::min(EndOffset, NewAllocaEndOffset);
SliceSize = NewEndOffset - NewBeginOffset;
OldUse = I->getUse();
OldPtr = cast<Instruction>(OldUse->get());
Instruction *OldUserI = cast<Instruction>(OldUse->getUser());
IRB.SetInsertPoint(OldUserI);
IRB.SetCurrentDebugLocation(OldUserI->getDebugLoc());
IRB.SetNamePrefix(Twine(NewAI.getName()) + "." + Twine(BeginOffset) + ".");
CanSROA &= visit(cast<Instruction>(OldUse->getUser()));
if (VecTy || IntTy)
First major step toward addressing PR14059. This teaches SROA to handle cases where we have partial integer loads and stores to an otherwise promotable alloca to widen[1] those loads and stores to cover the entire alloca and bitcast them into the appropriate type such that promotion can proceed. These partial loads and stores stem from an annoying confluence of ARM's calling convention and ABI lowering and the FCA pre-splitting which takes place in SROA. Clang lowers a { double, double } in-register function argument as a [4 x i32] function argument to ensure it is placed into integer 32-bit registers (a really unnerving implicit contract between Clang and the ARM backend I would add). This results in a FCA load of [4 x i32]* from the { double, double } alloca, and SROA decomposes this into a sequence of i32 loads and stores. Inlining proceeds, code gets folded, but at the end of the day, we still have i32 stores to the low and high halves of a double alloca. Widening these to be i64 operations, and bitcasting them to double prior to loading or storing allows promotion to proceed for these allocas. I looked quite a bit changing the IR which Clang produces for this case to be more friendly, but small changes seem unlikely to help. I think the best representation we could use currently would be to pass 4 i32 arguments thereby avoiding any FCAs, but that would still require this fix. It seems like it might eventually be nice to somehow encode the ABI register selection choices outside of the parameter type system so that the parameter can be a { double, double }, but the CC register annotations indicate that this should be passed via 4 integer registers. This patch does not address the second problem in PR14059, which is the reverse: when a struct alloca is loaded as a *larger* single integer. This patch also does not address some of the code quality issues with the FCA-splitting. Those don't actually impede any optimizations really, but they're on my list to clean up. [1]: Pedantic footnote: for those concerned about memory model issues here, this is safe. For the alloca to be promotable, it cannot escape or have any use of its address that could allow these loads or stores to be racing. Thus, widening is always safe. llvm-svn: 165928
2012-10-15 16:40:30 +08:00
assert(CanSROA);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
return CanSROA;
}
private:
// Make sure the other visit overloads are visible.
using Base::visit;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// Every instruction which can end up as a user must have a rewrite rule.
bool visitInstruction(Instruction &I) {
DEBUG(dbgs() << " !!!! Cannot rewrite: " << I << "\n");
llvm_unreachable("No rewrite rule for this instruction!");
}
Value *getNewAllocaSlicePtr(IRBuilderTy &IRB, Type *PointerTy) {
// Note that the offset computation can use BeginOffset or NewBeginOffset
// interchangeably for unsplit slices.
assert(IsSplit || BeginOffset == NewBeginOffset);
uint64_t Offset = NewBeginOffset - NewAllocaBeginOffset;
#ifndef NDEBUG
StringRef OldName = OldPtr->getName();
// Skip through the last '.sroa.' component of the name.
size_t LastSROAPrefix = OldName.rfind(".sroa.");
if (LastSROAPrefix != StringRef::npos) {
OldName = OldName.substr(LastSROAPrefix + strlen(".sroa."));
// Look for an SROA slice index.
size_t IndexEnd = OldName.find_first_not_of("0123456789");
if (IndexEnd != StringRef::npos && OldName[IndexEnd] == '.') {
// Strip the index and look for the offset.
OldName = OldName.substr(IndexEnd + 1);
size_t OffsetEnd = OldName.find_first_not_of("0123456789");
if (OffsetEnd != StringRef::npos && OldName[OffsetEnd] == '.')
// Strip the offset.
OldName = OldName.substr(OffsetEnd + 1);
}
}
// Strip any SROA suffixes as well.
OldName = OldName.substr(0, OldName.find(".sroa_"));
#endif
return getAdjustedPtr(IRB, DL, &NewAI,
APInt(DL.getPointerSizeInBits(), Offset), PointerTy,
#ifndef NDEBUG
Twine(OldName) + "."
#else
Twine()
#endif
);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
/// \brief Compute suitable alignment to access this slice of the *new*
/// alloca.
///
/// You can optionally pass a type to this routine and if that type's ABI
/// alignment is itself suitable, this will return zero.
unsigned getSliceAlign(Type *Ty = nullptr) {
unsigned NewAIAlign = NewAI.getAlignment();
if (!NewAIAlign)
NewAIAlign = DL.getABITypeAlignment(NewAI.getAllocatedType());
unsigned Align =
MinAlign(NewAIAlign, NewBeginOffset - NewAllocaBeginOffset);
return (Ty && Align == DL.getABITypeAlignment(Ty)) ? 0 : Align;
}
unsigned getIndex(uint64_t Offset) {
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
assert(VecTy && "Can only call getIndex when rewriting a vector");
uint64_t RelOffset = Offset - NewAllocaBeginOffset;
assert(RelOffset / ElementSize < UINT32_MAX && "Index out of bounds");
uint32_t Index = RelOffset / ElementSize;
assert(Index * ElementSize == RelOffset);
return Index;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
void deleteIfTriviallyDead(Value *V) {
Instruction *I = cast<Instruction>(V);
if (isInstructionTriviallyDead(I))
Pass.DeadInsts.insert(I);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
Value *rewriteVectorizedLoadInst() {
unsigned BeginIndex = getIndex(NewBeginOffset);
unsigned EndIndex = getIndex(NewEndOffset);
assert(EndIndex > BeginIndex && "Empty vector!");
Value *V = IRB.CreateAlignedLoad(&NewAI, NewAI.getAlignment(), "load");
return extractVector(IRB, V, BeginIndex, EndIndex, "vec");
}
Value *rewriteIntegerLoad(LoadInst &LI) {
assert(IntTy && "We cannot insert an integer to the alloca");
assert(!LI.isVolatile());
Value *V = IRB.CreateAlignedLoad(&NewAI, NewAI.getAlignment(), "load");
V = convertValue(DL, IRB, V, IntTy);
assert(NewBeginOffset >= NewAllocaBeginOffset && "Out of bounds offset");
uint64_t Offset = NewBeginOffset - NewAllocaBeginOffset;
if (Offset > 0 || NewEndOffset < NewAllocaEndOffset) {
IntegerType *ExtractTy = Type::getIntNTy(LI.getContext(), SliceSize * 8);
V = extractInteger(DL, IRB, V, ExtractTy, Offset, "extract");
}
// It is possible that the extracted type is not the load type. This
// happens if there is a load past the end of the alloca, and as
// a consequence the slice is narrower but still a candidate for integer
// lowering. To handle this case, we just zero extend the extracted
// integer.
assert(cast<IntegerType>(LI.getType())->getBitWidth() >= SliceSize * 8 &&
"Can only handle an extract for an overly wide load");
if (cast<IntegerType>(LI.getType())->getBitWidth() > SliceSize * 8)
V = IRB.CreateZExt(V, LI.getType());
return V;
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
bool visitLoadInst(LoadInst &LI) {
DEBUG(dbgs() << " original: " << LI << "\n");
Value *OldOp = LI.getOperand(0);
assert(OldOp == OldPtr);
Type *TargetTy = IsSplit ? Type::getIntNTy(LI.getContext(), SliceSize * 8)
PR14972: SROA vs. GVN exposed a really bad bug in SROA. The fundamental problem is that SROA didn't allow for overly wide loads where the bits past the end of the alloca were masked away and the load was sufficiently aligned to ensure there is no risk of page fault, or other trapping behavior. With such widened loads, SROA would delete the load entirely rather than clamping it to the size of the alloca in order to allow mem2reg to fire. This was exposed by a test case that neatly arranged for GVN to run first, widening certain loads, followed by an inline step, and then SROA which miscompiles the code. However, I see no reason why this hasn't been plaguing us in other contexts. It seems deeply broken. Diagnosing all of the above took all of 10 minutes of debugging. The really annoying aspect is that fixing this completely breaks the pass. ;] There was an implicit reliance on the fact that no loads or stores extended past the alloca once we decided to rewrite them in the final stage of SROA. This was used to encode information about whether the loads and stores had been split across multiple partitions of the original alloca. That required threading explicit tracking of whether a *use* of a partition is split across multiple partitions. Once that was done, another problem arose: we allowed splitting of integer loads and stores iff they were loads and stores to the entire alloca. This is a really arbitrary limitation, and splitting at least some integer loads and stores is crucial to maximize promotion opportunities. My first attempt was to start removing the restriction entirely, but currently that does Very Bad Things by causing *many* common alloca patterns to be fully decomposed into i8 operations and lots of or-ing together to produce larger integers on demand. The code bloat is terrifying. That is still the right end-goal, but substantial work must be done to either merge partitions or ensure that small i8 values are eagerly merged in some other pass. Sadly, figuring all this out took essentially all the time and effort here. So the end result is that we allow splitting only when the load or store at least covers the alloca. That ensures widened loads and stores don't hurt SROA, and that we don't rampantly decompose operations more than we have previously. All of this was already fairly well tested, and so I've just updated the tests to cover the wide load behavior. I can add a test that crafts the pass ordering magic which caused the original PR, but that seems really brittle and to provide little benefit. The fundamental problem is that widened loads should Just Work. llvm-svn: 177055
2013-03-14 19:32:24 +08:00
: LI.getType();
[SROA] Fix a nasty pile of bugs to do with big-endian, different alloca types and loads, loads or stores widened past the size of an alloca, etc. This started off with a bug report about big-endian behavior with bitfields and loads and stores to a { i32, i24 } struct. An initial attempt to fix this was sent for review in D10357, but that didn't really get to the root of the problem. The core issue was that canConvertValue and convertValue in SROA were handling different bitwidth integers by doing a zext of the integer. It wouldn't do a trunc though, only a zext! This would in turn lead SROA to form an i24 load from an i24 alloca, zext it to i32, and then use it. This would at least produce the wrong value for big-endian systems. One of my many false starts here was to correct the computation for big-endian systems by shifting. But this doesn't actually work because the original code has a 64-bit store to the entire 8 bytes, and a 32-bit load of the last 4 bytes, and because the alloc size is 8 bytes, we can't lose that last (least significant if bigendian) byte! The real problem here is that we're forming an i24 load in SROA which is actually not sufficiently wide to load all of the necessary bits here. The source has an i32 load, and SROA needs to form that as well. The straightforward way to do this is to disable the zext logic in canConvertValue and convertValue, forcing us to actually load all 32-bits. This seems like a really good change, but it in turn breaks several other parts of SROA. First in the chain of knock-on failures, we had places where we were doing integer-widening promotion even though some of the integer loads or stores extended *past the end* of the alloca's memory! There was even a comment about preventing this, but it only prevented the case where the type had a different bit size from its store size. So I added checks to handle the cases where we actually have a widened load or store and to avoid trying to special integer widening promotion in those cases. Second, we actually rely on the ability to promote in the face of loads past the end of an alloca! This is important so that we can (for example) speculate loads around PHI nodes to do more promotion. The bits loaded are garbage, but as long as they aren't used and the alignment is suitable high (which it wasn't in the test case!) this is "fine". And we can't stop promoting here, lots of things stop working well if we do. So we need to add specific logic to handle the extension (and truncation) case, but *only* where that extension or truncation are over bytes that *are outside the alloca's allocated storage* and thus totally bogus to load or store. And of course, once we add back this correct handling of extension or truncation, we need to correctly handle bigendian systems to avoid re-introducing the exact bug that started us off on this chain of misery in the first place, but this time even more subtle as it only happens along speculated loads atop a PHI node. I've ported an existing test for PHI speculation to the big-endian test file and checked that we get that part correct, and I've added several more interesting big-endian test cases that should help check that we're getting this correct. Fun times. llvm-svn: 242869
2015-07-22 11:32:42 +08:00
const bool IsLoadPastEnd = DL.getTypeStoreSize(TargetTy) > SliceSize;
bool IsPtrAdjusted = false;
Value *V;
if (VecTy) {
V = rewriteVectorizedLoadInst();
} else if (IntTy && LI.getType()->isIntegerTy()) {
V = rewriteIntegerLoad(LI);
} else if (NewBeginOffset == NewAllocaBeginOffset &&
[SROA] Fix a nasty pile of bugs to do with big-endian, different alloca types and loads, loads or stores widened past the size of an alloca, etc. This started off with a bug report about big-endian behavior with bitfields and loads and stores to a { i32, i24 } struct. An initial attempt to fix this was sent for review in D10357, but that didn't really get to the root of the problem. The core issue was that canConvertValue and convertValue in SROA were handling different bitwidth integers by doing a zext of the integer. It wouldn't do a trunc though, only a zext! This would in turn lead SROA to form an i24 load from an i24 alloca, zext it to i32, and then use it. This would at least produce the wrong value for big-endian systems. One of my many false starts here was to correct the computation for big-endian systems by shifting. But this doesn't actually work because the original code has a 64-bit store to the entire 8 bytes, and a 32-bit load of the last 4 bytes, and because the alloc size is 8 bytes, we can't lose that last (least significant if bigendian) byte! The real problem here is that we're forming an i24 load in SROA which is actually not sufficiently wide to load all of the necessary bits here. The source has an i32 load, and SROA needs to form that as well. The straightforward way to do this is to disable the zext logic in canConvertValue and convertValue, forcing us to actually load all 32-bits. This seems like a really good change, but it in turn breaks several other parts of SROA. First in the chain of knock-on failures, we had places where we were doing integer-widening promotion even though some of the integer loads or stores extended *past the end* of the alloca's memory! There was even a comment about preventing this, but it only prevented the case where the type had a different bit size from its store size. So I added checks to handle the cases where we actually have a widened load or store and to avoid trying to special integer widening promotion in those cases. Second, we actually rely on the ability to promote in the face of loads past the end of an alloca! This is important so that we can (for example) speculate loads around PHI nodes to do more promotion. The bits loaded are garbage, but as long as they aren't used and the alignment is suitable high (which it wasn't in the test case!) this is "fine". And we can't stop promoting here, lots of things stop working well if we do. So we need to add specific logic to handle the extension (and truncation) case, but *only* where that extension or truncation are over bytes that *are outside the alloca's allocated storage* and thus totally bogus to load or store. And of course, once we add back this correct handling of extension or truncation, we need to correctly handle bigendian systems to avoid re-introducing the exact bug that started us off on this chain of misery in the first place, but this time even more subtle as it only happens along speculated loads atop a PHI node. I've ported an existing test for PHI speculation to the big-endian test file and checked that we get that part correct, and I've added several more interesting big-endian test cases that should help check that we're getting this correct. Fun times. llvm-svn: 242869
2015-07-22 11:32:42 +08:00
NewEndOffset == NewAllocaEndOffset &&
(canConvertValue(DL, NewAllocaTy, TargetTy) ||
(IsLoadPastEnd && NewAllocaTy->isIntegerTy() &&
TargetTy->isIntegerTy()))) {
LoadInst *NewLI = IRB.CreateAlignedLoad(&NewAI, NewAI.getAlignment(),
LI.isVolatile(), LI.getName());
if (LI.isVolatile())
NewLI->setAtomic(LI.getOrdering(), LI.getSynchScope());
V = NewLI;
[SROA] Fix a nasty pile of bugs to do with big-endian, different alloca types and loads, loads or stores widened past the size of an alloca, etc. This started off with a bug report about big-endian behavior with bitfields and loads and stores to a { i32, i24 } struct. An initial attempt to fix this was sent for review in D10357, but that didn't really get to the root of the problem. The core issue was that canConvertValue and convertValue in SROA were handling different bitwidth integers by doing a zext of the integer. It wouldn't do a trunc though, only a zext! This would in turn lead SROA to form an i24 load from an i24 alloca, zext it to i32, and then use it. This would at least produce the wrong value for big-endian systems. One of my many false starts here was to correct the computation for big-endian systems by shifting. But this doesn't actually work because the original code has a 64-bit store to the entire 8 bytes, and a 32-bit load of the last 4 bytes, and because the alloc size is 8 bytes, we can't lose that last (least significant if bigendian) byte! The real problem here is that we're forming an i24 load in SROA which is actually not sufficiently wide to load all of the necessary bits here. The source has an i32 load, and SROA needs to form that as well. The straightforward way to do this is to disable the zext logic in canConvertValue and convertValue, forcing us to actually load all 32-bits. This seems like a really good change, but it in turn breaks several other parts of SROA. First in the chain of knock-on failures, we had places where we were doing integer-widening promotion even though some of the integer loads or stores extended *past the end* of the alloca's memory! There was even a comment about preventing this, but it only prevented the case where the type had a different bit size from its store size. So I added checks to handle the cases where we actually have a widened load or store and to avoid trying to special integer widening promotion in those cases. Second, we actually rely on the ability to promote in the face of loads past the end of an alloca! This is important so that we can (for example) speculate loads around PHI nodes to do more promotion. The bits loaded are garbage, but as long as they aren't used and the alignment is suitable high (which it wasn't in the test case!) this is "fine". And we can't stop promoting here, lots of things stop working well if we do. So we need to add specific logic to handle the extension (and truncation) case, but *only* where that extension or truncation are over bytes that *are outside the alloca's allocated storage* and thus totally bogus to load or store. And of course, once we add back this correct handling of extension or truncation, we need to correctly handle bigendian systems to avoid re-introducing the exact bug that started us off on this chain of misery in the first place, but this time even more subtle as it only happens along speculated loads atop a PHI node. I've ported an existing test for PHI speculation to the big-endian test file and checked that we get that part correct, and I've added several more interesting big-endian test cases that should help check that we're getting this correct. Fun times. llvm-svn: 242869
2015-07-22 11:32:42 +08:00
// If this is an integer load past the end of the slice (which means the
// bytes outside the slice are undef or this load is dead) just forcibly
// fix the integer size with correct handling of endianness.
if (auto *AITy = dyn_cast<IntegerType>(NewAllocaTy))
if (auto *TITy = dyn_cast<IntegerType>(TargetTy))
if (AITy->getBitWidth() < TITy->getBitWidth()) {
V = IRB.CreateZExt(V, TITy, "load.ext");
if (DL.isBigEndian())
V = IRB.CreateShl(V, TITy->getBitWidth() - AITy->getBitWidth(),
"endian_shift");
}
} else {
Type *LTy = TargetTy->getPointerTo();
LoadInst *NewLI = IRB.CreateAlignedLoad(getNewAllocaSlicePtr(IRB, LTy),
getSliceAlign(TargetTy),
LI.isVolatile(), LI.getName());
if (LI.isVolatile())
NewLI->setAtomic(LI.getOrdering(), LI.getSynchScope());
V = NewLI;
IsPtrAdjusted = true;
}
V = convertValue(DL, IRB, V, TargetTy);
PR14972: SROA vs. GVN exposed a really bad bug in SROA. The fundamental problem is that SROA didn't allow for overly wide loads where the bits past the end of the alloca were masked away and the load was sufficiently aligned to ensure there is no risk of page fault, or other trapping behavior. With such widened loads, SROA would delete the load entirely rather than clamping it to the size of the alloca in order to allow mem2reg to fire. This was exposed by a test case that neatly arranged for GVN to run first, widening certain loads, followed by an inline step, and then SROA which miscompiles the code. However, I see no reason why this hasn't been plaguing us in other contexts. It seems deeply broken. Diagnosing all of the above took all of 10 minutes of debugging. The really annoying aspect is that fixing this completely breaks the pass. ;] There was an implicit reliance on the fact that no loads or stores extended past the alloca once we decided to rewrite them in the final stage of SROA. This was used to encode information about whether the loads and stores had been split across multiple partitions of the original alloca. That required threading explicit tracking of whether a *use* of a partition is split across multiple partitions. Once that was done, another problem arose: we allowed splitting of integer loads and stores iff they were loads and stores to the entire alloca. This is a really arbitrary limitation, and splitting at least some integer loads and stores is crucial to maximize promotion opportunities. My first attempt was to start removing the restriction entirely, but currently that does Very Bad Things by causing *many* common alloca patterns to be fully decomposed into i8 operations and lots of or-ing together to produce larger integers on demand. The code bloat is terrifying. That is still the right end-goal, but substantial work must be done to either merge partitions or ensure that small i8 values are eagerly merged in some other pass. Sadly, figuring all this out took essentially all the time and effort here. So the end result is that we allow splitting only when the load or store at least covers the alloca. That ensures widened loads and stores don't hurt SROA, and that we don't rampantly decompose operations more than we have previously. All of this was already fairly well tested, and so I've just updated the tests to cover the wide load behavior. I can add a test that crafts the pass ordering magic which caused the original PR, but that seems really brittle and to provide little benefit. The fundamental problem is that widened loads should Just Work. llvm-svn: 177055
2013-03-14 19:32:24 +08:00
if (IsSplit) {
assert(!LI.isVolatile());
assert(LI.getType()->isIntegerTy() &&
"Only integer type loads and stores are split");
assert(SliceSize < DL.getTypeStoreSize(LI.getType()) &&
PR14972: SROA vs. GVN exposed a really bad bug in SROA. The fundamental problem is that SROA didn't allow for overly wide loads where the bits past the end of the alloca were masked away and the load was sufficiently aligned to ensure there is no risk of page fault, or other trapping behavior. With such widened loads, SROA would delete the load entirely rather than clamping it to the size of the alloca in order to allow mem2reg to fire. This was exposed by a test case that neatly arranged for GVN to run first, widening certain loads, followed by an inline step, and then SROA which miscompiles the code. However, I see no reason why this hasn't been plaguing us in other contexts. It seems deeply broken. Diagnosing all of the above took all of 10 minutes of debugging. The really annoying aspect is that fixing this completely breaks the pass. ;] There was an implicit reliance on the fact that no loads or stores extended past the alloca once we decided to rewrite them in the final stage of SROA. This was used to encode information about whether the loads and stores had been split across multiple partitions of the original alloca. That required threading explicit tracking of whether a *use* of a partition is split across multiple partitions. Once that was done, another problem arose: we allowed splitting of integer loads and stores iff they were loads and stores to the entire alloca. This is a really arbitrary limitation, and splitting at least some integer loads and stores is crucial to maximize promotion opportunities. My first attempt was to start removing the restriction entirely, but currently that does Very Bad Things by causing *many* common alloca patterns to be fully decomposed into i8 operations and lots of or-ing together to produce larger integers on demand. The code bloat is terrifying. That is still the right end-goal, but substantial work must be done to either merge partitions or ensure that small i8 values are eagerly merged in some other pass. Sadly, figuring all this out took essentially all the time and effort here. So the end result is that we allow splitting only when the load or store at least covers the alloca. That ensures widened loads and stores don't hurt SROA, and that we don't rampantly decompose operations more than we have previously. All of this was already fairly well tested, and so I've just updated the tests to cover the wide load behavior. I can add a test that crafts the pass ordering magic which caused the original PR, but that seems really brittle and to provide little benefit. The fundamental problem is that widened loads should Just Work. llvm-svn: 177055
2013-03-14 19:32:24 +08:00
"Split load isn't smaller than original load");
assert(LI.getType()->getIntegerBitWidth() ==
DL.getTypeStoreSizeInBits(LI.getType()) &&
"Non-byte-multiple bit width");
// Move the insertion point just past the load so that we can refer to it.
IRB.SetInsertPoint(&*std::next(BasicBlock::iterator(&LI)));
// Create a placeholder value with the same type as LI to use as the
// basis for the new value. This allows us to replace the uses of LI with
// the computed value, and then replace the placeholder with LI, leaving
// LI only used for this computation.
Value *Placeholder =
new LoadInst(UndefValue::get(LI.getType()->getPointerTo()));
[SROA] Teach SROA to be more aggressive in splitting now that we have a pre-splitting pass over loads and stores. Historically, splitting could cause enough problems that I hamstrung the entire process with a requirement that splittable integer loads and stores must cover the entire alloca. All smaller loads and stores were unsplittable to prevent chaos from ensuing. With the new pre-splitting logic that does load/store pair splitting I introduced in r225061, we can now very nicely handle arbitrarily splittable loads and stores. In order to fully benefit from these smarts, we need to mark all of the integer loads and stores as splittable. However, we don't actually want to rewrite partitions with all integer loads and stores marked as splittable. This will fail to extract scalar integers from aggregates, which is kind of the point of SROA. =] In order to resolve this, what we really want to do is only do pre-splitting on the alloca slices with integer loads and stores fully splittable. This allows us to uncover all non-integer uses of the alloca that would benefit from a split in an integer load or store (and where introducing the split is safe because it is just memory transfer from a load to a store). Once done, we make all the non-whole-alloca integer loads and stores unsplittable just as they have historically been, repartition and rewrite. The result is that when there are integer loads and stores anywhere within an alloca (such as from a memcpy of a sub-object of a larger object), we can split them up if there are non-integer components to the aggregate hiding beneath. I've added the challenging test cases to demonstrate how this is able to promote to scalars even a case where we have even *partially* overlapping loads and stores. This restores the single-store behavior for small arrays of i8s which is really nice. I've restored both the little endian testing and big endian testing for these exactly as they were prior to r225061. It also forced me to be more aggressive in an alignment test to actually defeat SROA. =] Without the added volatiles there, we actually split up the weird i16 loads and produce nice double allocas with better alignment. This also uncovered a number of bugs where we failed to handle splittable load and store slices which didn't have a begininng offset of zero. Those fixes are included, and without them the existing test cases explode in glorious fireworks. =] I've kept support for leaving whole-alloca integer loads and stores as splittable even for the purpose of rewriting, but I think that's likely no longer needed. With the new pre-splitting, we might be able to remove all the splitting support for loads and stores from the rewriter. Not doing that in this patch to try to isolate any performance regressions that causes in an easy to find and revert chunk. llvm-svn: 225074
2015-01-02 11:55:54 +08:00
V = insertInteger(DL, IRB, Placeholder, V, NewBeginOffset - BeginOffset,
"insert");
LI.replaceAllUsesWith(V);
Placeholder->replaceAllUsesWith(&LI);
delete Placeholder;
} else {
LI.replaceAllUsesWith(V);
}
Pass.DeadInsts.insert(&LI);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
deleteIfTriviallyDead(OldOp);
DEBUG(dbgs() << " to: " << *V << "\n");
return !LI.isVolatile() && !IsPtrAdjusted;
}
bool rewriteVectorizedStoreInst(Value *V, StoreInst &SI, Value *OldOp) {
if (V->getType() != VecTy) {
unsigned BeginIndex = getIndex(NewBeginOffset);
unsigned EndIndex = getIndex(NewEndOffset);
assert(EndIndex > BeginIndex && "Empty vector!");
unsigned NumElements = EndIndex - BeginIndex;
assert(NumElements <= VecTy->getNumElements() && "Too many elements!");
Type *SliceTy = (NumElements == 1)
? ElementTy
: VectorType::get(ElementTy, NumElements);
if (V->getType() != SliceTy)
V = convertValue(DL, IRB, V, SliceTy);
// Mix in the existing elements.
Value *Old = IRB.CreateAlignedLoad(&NewAI, NewAI.getAlignment(), "load");
V = insertVector(IRB, Old, V, BeginIndex, "vec");
}
StoreInst *Store = IRB.CreateAlignedStore(V, &NewAI, NewAI.getAlignment());
Pass.DeadInsts.insert(&SI);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
(void)Store;
DEBUG(dbgs() << " to: " << *Store << "\n");
return true;
}
bool rewriteIntegerStore(Value *V, StoreInst &SI) {
assert(IntTy && "We cannot extract an integer from the alloca");
assert(!SI.isVolatile());
if (DL.getTypeSizeInBits(V->getType()) != IntTy->getBitWidth()) {
Value *Old =
IRB.CreateAlignedLoad(&NewAI, NewAI.getAlignment(), "oldload");
Old = convertValue(DL, IRB, Old, IntTy);
assert(BeginOffset >= NewAllocaBeginOffset && "Out of bounds offset");
uint64_t Offset = BeginOffset - NewAllocaBeginOffset;
V = insertInteger(DL, IRB, Old, SI.getValueOperand(), Offset, "insert");
}
V = convertValue(DL, IRB, V, NewAllocaTy);
StoreInst *Store = IRB.CreateAlignedStore(V, &NewAI, NewAI.getAlignment());
Pass.DeadInsts.insert(&SI);
(void)Store;
DEBUG(dbgs() << " to: " << *Store << "\n");
return true;
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
bool visitStoreInst(StoreInst &SI) {
DEBUG(dbgs() << " original: " << SI << "\n");
Value *OldOp = SI.getOperand(1);
assert(OldOp == OldPtr);
Value *V = SI.getValueOperand();
// Strip all inbounds GEPs and pointer casts to try to dig out any root
// alloca that should be re-examined after promoting this alloca.
if (V->getType()->isPointerTy())
if (AllocaInst *AI = dyn_cast<AllocaInst>(V->stripInBoundsOffsets()))
Pass.PostPromotionWorklist.insert(AI);
if (SliceSize < DL.getTypeStoreSize(V->getType())) {
assert(!SI.isVolatile());
assert(V->getType()->isIntegerTy() &&
"Only integer type loads and stores are split");
assert(V->getType()->getIntegerBitWidth() ==
DL.getTypeStoreSizeInBits(V->getType()) &&
"Non-byte-multiple bit width");
IntegerType *NarrowTy = Type::getIntNTy(SI.getContext(), SliceSize * 8);
[SROA] Teach SROA to be more aggressive in splitting now that we have a pre-splitting pass over loads and stores. Historically, splitting could cause enough problems that I hamstrung the entire process with a requirement that splittable integer loads and stores must cover the entire alloca. All smaller loads and stores were unsplittable to prevent chaos from ensuing. With the new pre-splitting logic that does load/store pair splitting I introduced in r225061, we can now very nicely handle arbitrarily splittable loads and stores. In order to fully benefit from these smarts, we need to mark all of the integer loads and stores as splittable. However, we don't actually want to rewrite partitions with all integer loads and stores marked as splittable. This will fail to extract scalar integers from aggregates, which is kind of the point of SROA. =] In order to resolve this, what we really want to do is only do pre-splitting on the alloca slices with integer loads and stores fully splittable. This allows us to uncover all non-integer uses of the alloca that would benefit from a split in an integer load or store (and where introducing the split is safe because it is just memory transfer from a load to a store). Once done, we make all the non-whole-alloca integer loads and stores unsplittable just as they have historically been, repartition and rewrite. The result is that when there are integer loads and stores anywhere within an alloca (such as from a memcpy of a sub-object of a larger object), we can split them up if there are non-integer components to the aggregate hiding beneath. I've added the challenging test cases to demonstrate how this is able to promote to scalars even a case where we have even *partially* overlapping loads and stores. This restores the single-store behavior for small arrays of i8s which is really nice. I've restored both the little endian testing and big endian testing for these exactly as they were prior to r225061. It also forced me to be more aggressive in an alignment test to actually defeat SROA. =] Without the added volatiles there, we actually split up the weird i16 loads and produce nice double allocas with better alignment. This also uncovered a number of bugs where we failed to handle splittable load and store slices which didn't have a begininng offset of zero. Those fixes are included, and without them the existing test cases explode in glorious fireworks. =] I've kept support for leaving whole-alloca integer loads and stores as splittable even for the purpose of rewriting, but I think that's likely no longer needed. With the new pre-splitting, we might be able to remove all the splitting support for loads and stores from the rewriter. Not doing that in this patch to try to isolate any performance regressions that causes in an easy to find and revert chunk. llvm-svn: 225074
2015-01-02 11:55:54 +08:00
V = extractInteger(DL, IRB, V, NarrowTy, NewBeginOffset - BeginOffset,
"extract");
}
if (VecTy)
return rewriteVectorizedStoreInst(V, SI, OldOp);
if (IntTy && V->getType()->isIntegerTy())
return rewriteIntegerStore(V, SI);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
[SROA] Fix a nasty pile of bugs to do with big-endian, different alloca types and loads, loads or stores widened past the size of an alloca, etc. This started off with a bug report about big-endian behavior with bitfields and loads and stores to a { i32, i24 } struct. An initial attempt to fix this was sent for review in D10357, but that didn't really get to the root of the problem. The core issue was that canConvertValue and convertValue in SROA were handling different bitwidth integers by doing a zext of the integer. It wouldn't do a trunc though, only a zext! This would in turn lead SROA to form an i24 load from an i24 alloca, zext it to i32, and then use it. This would at least produce the wrong value for big-endian systems. One of my many false starts here was to correct the computation for big-endian systems by shifting. But this doesn't actually work because the original code has a 64-bit store to the entire 8 bytes, and a 32-bit load of the last 4 bytes, and because the alloc size is 8 bytes, we can't lose that last (least significant if bigendian) byte! The real problem here is that we're forming an i24 load in SROA which is actually not sufficiently wide to load all of the necessary bits here. The source has an i32 load, and SROA needs to form that as well. The straightforward way to do this is to disable the zext logic in canConvertValue and convertValue, forcing us to actually load all 32-bits. This seems like a really good change, but it in turn breaks several other parts of SROA. First in the chain of knock-on failures, we had places where we were doing integer-widening promotion even though some of the integer loads or stores extended *past the end* of the alloca's memory! There was even a comment about preventing this, but it only prevented the case where the type had a different bit size from its store size. So I added checks to handle the cases where we actually have a widened load or store and to avoid trying to special integer widening promotion in those cases. Second, we actually rely on the ability to promote in the face of loads past the end of an alloca! This is important so that we can (for example) speculate loads around PHI nodes to do more promotion. The bits loaded are garbage, but as long as they aren't used and the alignment is suitable high (which it wasn't in the test case!) this is "fine". And we can't stop promoting here, lots of things stop working well if we do. So we need to add specific logic to handle the extension (and truncation) case, but *only* where that extension or truncation are over bytes that *are outside the alloca's allocated storage* and thus totally bogus to load or store. And of course, once we add back this correct handling of extension or truncation, we need to correctly handle bigendian systems to avoid re-introducing the exact bug that started us off on this chain of misery in the first place, but this time even more subtle as it only happens along speculated loads atop a PHI node. I've ported an existing test for PHI speculation to the big-endian test file and checked that we get that part correct, and I've added several more interesting big-endian test cases that should help check that we're getting this correct. Fun times. llvm-svn: 242869
2015-07-22 11:32:42 +08:00
const bool IsStorePastEnd = DL.getTypeStoreSize(V->getType()) > SliceSize;
StoreInst *NewSI;
if (NewBeginOffset == NewAllocaBeginOffset &&
NewEndOffset == NewAllocaEndOffset &&
[SROA] Fix a nasty pile of bugs to do with big-endian, different alloca types and loads, loads or stores widened past the size of an alloca, etc. This started off with a bug report about big-endian behavior with bitfields and loads and stores to a { i32, i24 } struct. An initial attempt to fix this was sent for review in D10357, but that didn't really get to the root of the problem. The core issue was that canConvertValue and convertValue in SROA were handling different bitwidth integers by doing a zext of the integer. It wouldn't do a trunc though, only a zext! This would in turn lead SROA to form an i24 load from an i24 alloca, zext it to i32, and then use it. This would at least produce the wrong value for big-endian systems. One of my many false starts here was to correct the computation for big-endian systems by shifting. But this doesn't actually work because the original code has a 64-bit store to the entire 8 bytes, and a 32-bit load of the last 4 bytes, and because the alloc size is 8 bytes, we can't lose that last (least significant if bigendian) byte! The real problem here is that we're forming an i24 load in SROA which is actually not sufficiently wide to load all of the necessary bits here. The source has an i32 load, and SROA needs to form that as well. The straightforward way to do this is to disable the zext logic in canConvertValue and convertValue, forcing us to actually load all 32-bits. This seems like a really good change, but it in turn breaks several other parts of SROA. First in the chain of knock-on failures, we had places where we were doing integer-widening promotion even though some of the integer loads or stores extended *past the end* of the alloca's memory! There was even a comment about preventing this, but it only prevented the case where the type had a different bit size from its store size. So I added checks to handle the cases where we actually have a widened load or store and to avoid trying to special integer widening promotion in those cases. Second, we actually rely on the ability to promote in the face of loads past the end of an alloca! This is important so that we can (for example) speculate loads around PHI nodes to do more promotion. The bits loaded are garbage, but as long as they aren't used and the alignment is suitable high (which it wasn't in the test case!) this is "fine". And we can't stop promoting here, lots of things stop working well if we do. So we need to add specific logic to handle the extension (and truncation) case, but *only* where that extension or truncation are over bytes that *are outside the alloca's allocated storage* and thus totally bogus to load or store. And of course, once we add back this correct handling of extension or truncation, we need to correctly handle bigendian systems to avoid re-introducing the exact bug that started us off on this chain of misery in the first place, but this time even more subtle as it only happens along speculated loads atop a PHI node. I've ported an existing test for PHI speculation to the big-endian test file and checked that we get that part correct, and I've added several more interesting big-endian test cases that should help check that we're getting this correct. Fun times. llvm-svn: 242869
2015-07-22 11:32:42 +08:00
(canConvertValue(DL, V->getType(), NewAllocaTy) ||
(IsStorePastEnd && NewAllocaTy->isIntegerTy() &&
V->getType()->isIntegerTy()))) {
// If this is an integer store past the end of slice (and thus the bytes
// past that point are irrelevant or this is unreachable), truncate the
// value prior to storing.
if (auto *VITy = dyn_cast<IntegerType>(V->getType()))
if (auto *AITy = dyn_cast<IntegerType>(NewAllocaTy))
if (VITy->getBitWidth() > AITy->getBitWidth()) {
if (DL.isBigEndian())
V = IRB.CreateLShr(V, VITy->getBitWidth() - AITy->getBitWidth(),
"endian_shift");
V = IRB.CreateTrunc(V, AITy, "load.trunc");
}
V = convertValue(DL, IRB, V, NewAllocaTy);
NewSI = IRB.CreateAlignedStore(V, &NewAI, NewAI.getAlignment(),
SI.isVolatile());
} else {
Value *NewPtr = getNewAllocaSlicePtr(IRB, V->getType()->getPointerTo());
NewSI = IRB.CreateAlignedStore(V, NewPtr, getSliceAlign(V->getType()),
SI.isVolatile());
}
if (SI.isVolatile())
NewSI->setAtomic(SI.getOrdering(), SI.getSynchScope());
Pass.DeadInsts.insert(&SI);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
deleteIfTriviallyDead(OldOp);
DEBUG(dbgs() << " to: " << *NewSI << "\n");
return NewSI->getPointerOperand() == &NewAI && !SI.isVolatile();
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
/// \brief Compute an integer value from splatting an i8 across the given
/// number of bytes.
///
/// Note that this routine assumes an i8 is a byte. If that isn't true, don't
/// call this routine.
2013-02-20 06:02:21 +08:00
/// FIXME: Heed the advice above.
///
/// \param V The i8 value to splat.
/// \param Size The number of bytes in the output (assuming i8 is one byte)
Value *getIntegerSplat(Value *V, unsigned Size) {
assert(Size > 0 && "Expected a positive number of bytes.");
IntegerType *VTy = cast<IntegerType>(V->getType());
assert(VTy->getBitWidth() == 8 && "Expected an i8 value for the byte");
if (Size == 1)
return V;
Type *SplatIntTy = Type::getIntNTy(VTy->getContext(), Size * 8);
V = IRB.CreateMul(
IRB.CreateZExt(V, SplatIntTy, "zext"),
ConstantExpr::getUDiv(
Constant::getAllOnesValue(SplatIntTy),
ConstantExpr::getZExt(Constant::getAllOnesValue(V->getType()),
SplatIntTy)),
"isplat");
return V;
}
/// \brief Compute a vector splat for a given element value.
Value *getVectorSplat(Value *V, unsigned NumElements) {
V = IRB.CreateVectorSplat(NumElements, V, "vsplat");
DEBUG(dbgs() << " splat: " << *V << "\n");
return V;
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
bool visitMemSetInst(MemSetInst &II) {
DEBUG(dbgs() << " original: " << II << "\n");
assert(II.getRawDest() == OldPtr);
// If the memset has a variable size, it cannot be split, just adjust the
// pointer to the new alloca.
if (!isa<Constant>(II.getLength())) {
assert(!IsSplit);
assert(NewBeginOffset == BeginOffset);
II.setDest(getNewAllocaSlicePtr(IRB, OldPtr->getType()));
Type *CstTy = II.getAlignmentCst()->getType();
II.setAlignment(ConstantInt::get(CstTy, getSliceAlign()));
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
deleteIfTriviallyDead(OldPtr);
return false;
}
// Record this instruction for deletion.
Pass.DeadInsts.insert(&II);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
Type *AllocaTy = NewAI.getAllocatedType();
Type *ScalarTy = AllocaTy->getScalarType();
// If this doesn't map cleanly onto the alloca type, and that type isn't
// a single value type, just emit a memset.
if (!VecTy && !IntTy &&
(BeginOffset > NewAllocaBeginOffset || EndOffset < NewAllocaEndOffset ||
SliceSize != DL.getTypeStoreSize(AllocaTy) ||
!AllocaTy->isSingleValueType() ||
!DL.isLegalInteger(DL.getTypeSizeInBits(ScalarTy)) ||
DL.getTypeSizeInBits(ScalarTy) % 8 != 0)) {
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
Type *SizeTy = II.getLength()->getType();
Constant *Size = ConstantInt::get(SizeTy, NewEndOffset - NewBeginOffset);
CallInst *New = IRB.CreateMemSet(
getNewAllocaSlicePtr(IRB, OldPtr->getType()), II.getValue(), Size,
getSliceAlign(), II.isVolatile());
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
(void)New;
DEBUG(dbgs() << " to: " << *New << "\n");
return false;
}
// If we can represent this as a simple value, we have to build the actual
// value to store, which requires expanding the byte present in memset to
// a sensible representation for the alloca type. This is essentially
// splatting the byte to a sufficiently wide integer, splatting it across
// any desired vector width, and bitcasting to the final type.
Value *V;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
if (VecTy) {
// If this is a memset of a vectorized alloca, insert it.
assert(ElementTy == ScalarTy);
unsigned BeginIndex = getIndex(NewBeginOffset);
unsigned EndIndex = getIndex(NewEndOffset);
assert(EndIndex > BeginIndex && "Empty vector!");
unsigned NumElements = EndIndex - BeginIndex;
assert(NumElements <= VecTy->getNumElements() && "Too many elements!");
Value *Splat =
getIntegerSplat(II.getValue(), DL.getTypeSizeInBits(ElementTy) / 8);
Splat = convertValue(DL, IRB, Splat, ElementTy);
if (NumElements > 1)
Splat = getVectorSplat(Splat, NumElements);
Value *Old =
IRB.CreateAlignedLoad(&NewAI, NewAI.getAlignment(), "oldload");
V = insertVector(IRB, Old, Splat, BeginIndex, "vec");
} else if (IntTy) {
// If this is a memset on an alloca where we can widen stores, insert the
// set integer.
assert(!II.isVolatile());
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
uint64_t Size = NewEndOffset - NewBeginOffset;
V = getIntegerSplat(II.getValue(), Size);
if (IntTy && (BeginOffset != NewAllocaBeginOffset ||
EndOffset != NewAllocaBeginOffset)) {
Value *Old =
IRB.CreateAlignedLoad(&NewAI, NewAI.getAlignment(), "oldload");
Old = convertValue(DL, IRB, Old, IntTy);
uint64_t Offset = NewBeginOffset - NewAllocaBeginOffset;
V = insertInteger(DL, IRB, Old, V, Offset, "insert");
} else {
assert(V->getType() == IntTy &&
"Wrong type for an alloca wide integer!");
}
V = convertValue(DL, IRB, V, AllocaTy);
} else {
// Established these invariants above.
assert(NewBeginOffset == NewAllocaBeginOffset);
assert(NewEndOffset == NewAllocaEndOffset);
V = getIntegerSplat(II.getValue(), DL.getTypeSizeInBits(ScalarTy) / 8);
if (VectorType *AllocaVecTy = dyn_cast<VectorType>(AllocaTy))
V = getVectorSplat(V, AllocaVecTy->getNumElements());
V = convertValue(DL, IRB, V, AllocaTy);
}
Value *New = IRB.CreateAlignedStore(V, &NewAI, NewAI.getAlignment(),
II.isVolatile());
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
(void)New;
DEBUG(dbgs() << " to: " << *New << "\n");
return !II.isVolatile();
}
bool visitMemTransferInst(MemTransferInst &II) {
// Rewriting of memory transfer instructions can be a bit tricky. We break
// them into two categories: split intrinsics and unsplit intrinsics.
DEBUG(dbgs() << " original: " << II << "\n");
bool IsDest = &II.getRawDestUse() == OldUse;
2014-02-25 15:56:00 +08:00
assert((IsDest && II.getRawDest() == OldPtr) ||
(!IsDest && II.getRawSource() == OldPtr));
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
unsigned SliceAlign = getSliceAlign();
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// For unsplit intrinsics, we simply modify the source and destination
// pointers in place. This isn't just an optimization, it is a matter of
// correctness. With unsplit intrinsics we may be dealing with transfers
// within a single alloca before SROA ran, or with transfers that have
// a variable length. We may also be dealing with memmove instead of
// memcpy, and so simply updating the pointers is the necessary for us to
// update both source and dest of a single call.
if (!IsSplittable) {
Value *AdjustedPtr = getNewAllocaSlicePtr(IRB, OldPtr->getType());
if (IsDest)
II.setDest(AdjustedPtr);
else
II.setSource(AdjustedPtr);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
if (II.getAlignment() > SliceAlign) {
Type *CstTy = II.getAlignmentCst()->getType();
II.setAlignment(
ConstantInt::get(CstTy, MinAlign(II.getAlignment(), SliceAlign)));
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
DEBUG(dbgs() << " to: " << II << "\n");
deleteIfTriviallyDead(OldPtr);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
return false;
}
// For split transfer intrinsics we have an incredibly useful assurance:
// the source and destination do not reside within the same alloca, and at
// least one of them does not escape. This means that we can replace
// memmove with memcpy, and we don't need to worry about all manner of
// downsides to splitting and transforming the operations.
// If this doesn't map cleanly onto the alloca type, and that type isn't
// a single value type, just emit a memcpy.
bool EmitMemCpy =
!VecTy && !IntTy &&
(BeginOffset > NewAllocaBeginOffset || EndOffset < NewAllocaEndOffset ||
SliceSize != DL.getTypeStoreSize(NewAI.getAllocatedType()) ||
!NewAI.getAllocatedType()->isSingleValueType());
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// If we're just going to emit a memcpy, the alloca hasn't changed, and the
// size hasn't been shrunk based on analysis of the viable range, this is
// a no-op.
if (EmitMemCpy && &OldAI == &NewAI) {
// Ensure the start lines up.
assert(NewBeginOffset == BeginOffset);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// Rewrite the size as needed.
if (NewEndOffset != EndOffset)
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
II.setLength(ConstantInt::get(II.getLength()->getType(),
NewEndOffset - NewBeginOffset));
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
return false;
}
// Record this instruction for deletion.
Pass.DeadInsts.insert(&II);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// Strip all inbounds GEPs and pointer casts to try to dig out any root
// alloca that should be re-examined after rewriting this instruction.
Value *OtherPtr = IsDest ? II.getRawSource() : II.getRawDest();
if (AllocaInst *AI =
dyn_cast<AllocaInst>(OtherPtr->stripInBoundsOffsets())) {
assert(AI != &OldAI && AI != &NewAI &&
"Splittable transfers cannot reach the same alloca on both ends.");
Revert the business end of r164636 and try again. I'll come in again. ;] This should really, really fix PR13916. For real this time. The underlying bug is... a bit more subtle than I had imagined. The setup is a code pattern that leads to an @llvm.memcpy call with two equal pointers to an alloca in the source and dest. Now, not any pattern will do. The alloca needs to be formed just so, and both pointers should be wrapped in different bitcasts etc. When this precise pattern hits, a funny sequence of events transpires. First, we correctly detect the potential for overlap, and correctly optimize the memcpy. The first time. However, we do simplify the set of users of the alloca, and that causes us to run the alloca back through the SROA pass in case there are knock-on simplifications. At this point, a curious thing has happened. If we happen to have an i8 alloca, we have direct i8 pointer values. So we don't bother creating a cast, we rewrite the arguments to the memcpy to dircetly refer to the alloca. Now, in an unrelated area of the pass, we have clever logic which ensures that when visiting each User of a particular pointer derived from an alloca, we only visit that User once, and directly inspect all of its operands which refer to that particular pointer value. However, the mechanism used to detect memcpy's with the potential to overlap relied upon getting visited once per *Use*, not once per *User*. This is always true *unless* the same exact value is both source and dest. It turns out that almost nothing actually produces that pattern though. We can hand craft test cases that more directly test this behavior of course, and those are included. Also, note that there is a significant missed optimization here -- we prove in many cases that there is a non-volatile memcpy call with identical source and dest addresses. We shouldn't prevent splitting the alloca in that case, and in fact we should just remove such memcpy calls eagerly. I'll address that in a subsequent commit. llvm-svn: 164669
2012-09-26 15:41:40 +08:00
Pass.Worklist.insert(AI);
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
Type *OtherPtrTy = OtherPtr->getType();
unsigned OtherAS = OtherPtrTy->getPointerAddressSpace();
// Compute the relative offset for the other pointer within the transfer.
unsigned IntPtrWidth = DL.getPointerSizeInBits(OtherAS);
APInt OtherOffset(IntPtrWidth, NewBeginOffset - BeginOffset);
unsigned OtherAlign = MinAlign(II.getAlignment() ? II.getAlignment() : 1,
OtherOffset.zextOrTrunc(64).getZExtValue());
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
if (EmitMemCpy) {
// Compute the other pointer, folding as much as possible to produce
// a single, simple GEP in most cases.
OtherPtr = getAdjustedPtr(IRB, DL, OtherPtr, OtherOffset, OtherPtrTy,
OtherPtr->getName() + ".");
Value *OurPtr = getNewAllocaSlicePtr(IRB, OldPtr->getType());
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
Type *SizeTy = II.getLength()->getType();
Constant *Size = ConstantInt::get(SizeTy, NewEndOffset - NewBeginOffset);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
CallInst *New = IRB.CreateMemCpy(
IsDest ? OurPtr : OtherPtr, IsDest ? OtherPtr : OurPtr, Size,
MinAlign(SliceAlign, OtherAlign), II.isVolatile());
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
(void)New;
DEBUG(dbgs() << " to: " << *New << "\n");
return false;
}
bool IsWholeAlloca = NewBeginOffset == NewAllocaBeginOffset &&
NewEndOffset == NewAllocaEndOffset;
uint64_t Size = NewEndOffset - NewBeginOffset;
unsigned BeginIndex = VecTy ? getIndex(NewBeginOffset) : 0;
unsigned EndIndex = VecTy ? getIndex(NewEndOffset) : 0;
unsigned NumElements = EndIndex - BeginIndex;
IntegerType *SubIntTy =
IntTy ? Type::getIntNTy(IntTy->getContext(), Size * 8) : nullptr;
// Reset the other pointer type to match the register type we're going to
// use, but using the address space of the original other pointer.
if (VecTy && !IsWholeAlloca) {
if (NumElements == 1)
OtherPtrTy = VecTy->getElementType();
else
OtherPtrTy = VectorType::get(VecTy->getElementType(), NumElements);
OtherPtrTy = OtherPtrTy->getPointerTo(OtherAS);
} else if (IntTy && !IsWholeAlloca) {
OtherPtrTy = SubIntTy->getPointerTo(OtherAS);
} else {
OtherPtrTy = NewAllocaTy->getPointerTo(OtherAS);
}
Value *SrcPtr = getAdjustedPtr(IRB, DL, OtherPtr, OtherOffset, OtherPtrTy,
OtherPtr->getName() + ".");
unsigned SrcAlign = OtherAlign;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
Value *DstPtr = &NewAI;
unsigned DstAlign = SliceAlign;
if (!IsDest) {
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
std::swap(SrcPtr, DstPtr);
std::swap(SrcAlign, DstAlign);
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
Value *Src;
if (VecTy && !IsWholeAlloca && !IsDest) {
Src = IRB.CreateAlignedLoad(&NewAI, NewAI.getAlignment(), "load");
Src = extractVector(IRB, Src, BeginIndex, EndIndex, "vec");
} else if (IntTy && !IsWholeAlloca && !IsDest) {
Src = IRB.CreateAlignedLoad(&NewAI, NewAI.getAlignment(), "load");
Src = convertValue(DL, IRB, Src, IntTy);
uint64_t Offset = NewBeginOffset - NewAllocaBeginOffset;
Src = extractInteger(DL, IRB, Src, SubIntTy, Offset, "extract");
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
} else {
Src =
IRB.CreateAlignedLoad(SrcPtr, SrcAlign, II.isVolatile(), "copyload");
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
if (VecTy && !IsWholeAlloca && IsDest) {
Value *Old =
IRB.CreateAlignedLoad(&NewAI, NewAI.getAlignment(), "oldload");
Src = insertVector(IRB, Old, Src, BeginIndex, "vec");
} else if (IntTy && !IsWholeAlloca && IsDest) {
Value *Old =
IRB.CreateAlignedLoad(&NewAI, NewAI.getAlignment(), "oldload");
Old = convertValue(DL, IRB, Old, IntTy);
uint64_t Offset = NewBeginOffset - NewAllocaBeginOffset;
Src = insertInteger(DL, IRB, Old, Src, Offset, "insert");
Src = convertValue(DL, IRB, Src, NewAllocaTy);
}
StoreInst *Store = cast<StoreInst>(
IRB.CreateAlignedStore(Src, DstPtr, DstAlign, II.isVolatile()));
(void)Store;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
DEBUG(dbgs() << " to: " << *Store << "\n");
return !II.isVolatile();
}
bool visitIntrinsicInst(IntrinsicInst &II) {
assert(II.getIntrinsicID() == Intrinsic::lifetime_start ||
II.getIntrinsicID() == Intrinsic::lifetime_end);
DEBUG(dbgs() << " original: " << II << "\n");
assert(II.getArgOperand(1) == OldPtr);
// Record this instruction for deletion.
Pass.DeadInsts.insert(&II);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
ConstantInt *Size =
ConstantInt::get(cast<IntegerType>(II.getArgOperand(0)->getType()),
NewEndOffset - NewBeginOffset);
Value *Ptr = getNewAllocaSlicePtr(IRB, OldPtr->getType());
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
Value *New;
if (II.getIntrinsicID() == Intrinsic::lifetime_start)
New = IRB.CreateLifetimeStart(Ptr, Size);
else
New = IRB.CreateLifetimeEnd(Ptr, Size);
(void)New;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
DEBUG(dbgs() << " to: " << *New << "\n");
return true;
}
bool visitPHINode(PHINode &PN) {
DEBUG(dbgs() << " original: " << PN << "\n");
assert(BeginOffset >= NewAllocaBeginOffset && "PHIs are unsplittable");
assert(EndOffset <= NewAllocaEndOffset && "PHIs are unsplittable");
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// We would like to compute a new pointer in only one place, but have it be
// as local as possible to the PHI. To do that, we re-use the location of
// the old pointer, which necessarily must be in the right position to
// dominate the PHI.
IRBuilderTy PtrBuilder(IRB);
if (isa<PHINode>(OldPtr))
PtrBuilder.SetInsertPoint(&*OldPtr->getParent()->getFirstInsertionPt());
else
PtrBuilder.SetInsertPoint(OldPtr);
PtrBuilder.SetCurrentDebugLocation(OldPtr->getDebugLoc());
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
Value *NewPtr = getNewAllocaSlicePtr(PtrBuilder, OldPtr->getType());
// Replace the operands which were using the old pointer.
std::replace(PN.op_begin(), PN.op_end(), cast<Value>(OldPtr), NewPtr);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
DEBUG(dbgs() << " to: " << PN << "\n");
deleteIfTriviallyDead(OldPtr);
[SROA] Fix another instability in SROA with respect to the slice ordering. The fundamental problem that we're hitting here is that the use-def chain ordering is *itself* not a stable thing to be relying on in the rewriting for SROA. Further, we use a non-stable sort over the slices to arrange them based on the section of the alloca they're operating on. With a debugging STL implementation (or different implementations in stage2 and stage3) this can cause stage2 != stage3. The specific aspect of this problem fixed in this commit deals with the rewriting and load-speculation around PHIs and Selects. This, like many other aspects of the use-rewriting in SROA, is really part of the "strong SSA-formation" that is doen by SROA where it works very hard to canonicalize loads and stores in *just* the right way to satisfy the needs of mem2reg[1]. When we have a select (or a PHI) with 2 uses of the same alloca, we test that loads downstream of the select are speculatable around it twice. If only one of the operands to the select needs to be rewritten, then if we get lucky we rewrite that one first and the select is immediately speculatable. This can cause the order of operand visitation, and thus the order of slices to be rewritten, to change an alloca from promotable to non-promotable and vice versa. The fix is to defer all of the speculation until *after* the rewrite phase is done. Once we've rewritten everything, we can accurately test for whether speculation will work (once, instead of twice!) and the order ceases to matter. This also happens to simplify the other subtlety of speculation -- we need to *not* speculate anything unless the result of speculating will make the alloca fully promotable by mem2reg. I had a previous attempt at simplifying this, but it was still pretty horrible. There is actually already a *really* nice test case for this in basictest.ll, but on multiple STL implementations and inputs, we just got "lucky". Fortunately, the test case is very small and we can essentially build it in exactly the opposite way to get reasonable coverage in both directions even from normal STL implementations. llvm-svn: 202092
2014-02-25 08:07:09 +08:00
// PHIs can't be promoted on their own, but often can be speculated. We
// check the speculation outside of the rewriter so that we see the
// fully-rewritten alloca.
PHIUsers.insert(&PN);
return true;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
bool visitSelectInst(SelectInst &SI) {
DEBUG(dbgs() << " original: " << SI << "\n");
assert((SI.getTrueValue() == OldPtr || SI.getFalseValue() == OldPtr) &&
"Pointer isn't an operand!");
assert(BeginOffset >= NewAllocaBeginOffset && "Selects are unsplittable");
assert(EndOffset <= NewAllocaEndOffset && "Selects are unsplittable");
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
Value *NewPtr = getNewAllocaSlicePtr(IRB, OldPtr->getType());
// Replace the operands which were using the old pointer.
if (SI.getOperand(1) == OldPtr)
SI.setOperand(1, NewPtr);
if (SI.getOperand(2) == OldPtr)
SI.setOperand(2, NewPtr);
DEBUG(dbgs() << " to: " << SI << "\n");
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
deleteIfTriviallyDead(OldPtr);
[SROA] Fix another instability in SROA with respect to the slice ordering. The fundamental problem that we're hitting here is that the use-def chain ordering is *itself* not a stable thing to be relying on in the rewriting for SROA. Further, we use a non-stable sort over the slices to arrange them based on the section of the alloca they're operating on. With a debugging STL implementation (or different implementations in stage2 and stage3) this can cause stage2 != stage3. The specific aspect of this problem fixed in this commit deals with the rewriting and load-speculation around PHIs and Selects. This, like many other aspects of the use-rewriting in SROA, is really part of the "strong SSA-formation" that is doen by SROA where it works very hard to canonicalize loads and stores in *just* the right way to satisfy the needs of mem2reg[1]. When we have a select (or a PHI) with 2 uses of the same alloca, we test that loads downstream of the select are speculatable around it twice. If only one of the operands to the select needs to be rewritten, then if we get lucky we rewrite that one first and the select is immediately speculatable. This can cause the order of operand visitation, and thus the order of slices to be rewritten, to change an alloca from promotable to non-promotable and vice versa. The fix is to defer all of the speculation until *after* the rewrite phase is done. Once we've rewritten everything, we can accurately test for whether speculation will work (once, instead of twice!) and the order ceases to matter. This also happens to simplify the other subtlety of speculation -- we need to *not* speculate anything unless the result of speculating will make the alloca fully promotable by mem2reg. I had a previous attempt at simplifying this, but it was still pretty horrible. There is actually already a *really* nice test case for this in basictest.ll, but on multiple STL implementations and inputs, we just got "lucky". Fortunately, the test case is very small and we can essentially build it in exactly the opposite way to get reasonable coverage in both directions even from normal STL implementations. llvm-svn: 202092
2014-02-25 08:07:09 +08:00
// Selects can't be promoted on their own, but often can be speculated. We
// check the speculation outside of the rewriter so that we see the
// fully-rewritten alloca.
SelectUsers.insert(&SI);
return true;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
};
namespace {
/// \brief Visitor to rewrite aggregate loads and stores as scalar.
///
/// This pass aggressively rewrites all aggregate loads and stores on
/// a particular pointer (or any pointer derived from it which we can identify)
/// with scalar loads and stores.
class AggLoadStoreRewriter : public InstVisitor<AggLoadStoreRewriter, bool> {
// Befriend the base class so it can delegate to private visit methods.
friend class llvm::InstVisitor<AggLoadStoreRewriter, bool>;
/// Queue of pointer uses to analyze and potentially rewrite.
SmallVector<Use *, 8> Queue;
/// Set to prevent us from cycling with phi nodes and loops.
SmallPtrSet<User *, 8> Visited;
/// The current pointer use being rewritten. This is used to dig up the used
/// value (as opposed to the user).
Use *U;
public:
/// Rewrite loads and stores through a pointer and all pointers derived from
/// it.
bool rewrite(Instruction &I) {
DEBUG(dbgs() << " Rewriting FCA loads and stores...\n");
enqueueUsers(I);
bool Changed = false;
while (!Queue.empty()) {
U = Queue.pop_back_val();
Changed |= visit(cast<Instruction>(U->getUser()));
}
return Changed;
}
private:
/// Enqueue all the users of the given instruction for further processing.
/// This uses a set to de-duplicate users.
void enqueueUsers(Instruction &I) {
[C++11] Add range based accessors for the Use-Def chain of a Value. This requires a number of steps. 1) Move value_use_iterator into the Value class as an implementation detail 2) Change it to actually be a *Use* iterator rather than a *User* iterator. 3) Add an adaptor which is a User iterator that always looks through the Use to the User. 4) Wrap these in Value::use_iterator and Value::user_iterator typedefs. 5) Add the range adaptors as Value::uses() and Value::users(). 6) Update *all* of the callers to correctly distinguish between whether they wanted a use_iterator (and to explicitly dig out the User when needed), or a user_iterator which makes the Use itself totally opaque. Because #6 requires churning essentially everything that walked the Use-Def chains, I went ahead and added all of the range adaptors and switched them to range-based loops where appropriate. Also because the renaming requires at least churning every line of code, it didn't make any sense to split these up into multiple commits -- all of which would touch all of the same lies of code. The result is still not quite optimal. The Value::use_iterator is a nice regular iterator, but Value::user_iterator is an iterator over User*s rather than over the User objects themselves. As a consequence, it fits a bit awkwardly into the range-based world and it has the weird extra-dereferencing 'operator->' that so many of our iterators have. I think this could be fixed by providing something which transforms a range of T&s into a range of T*s, but that *can* be separated into another patch, and it isn't yet 100% clear whether this is the right move. However, this change gets us most of the benefit and cleans up a substantial amount of code around Use and User. =] llvm-svn: 203364
2014-03-09 11:16:01 +08:00
for (Use &U : I.uses())
if (Visited.insert(U.getUser()).second)
[C++11] Add range based accessors for the Use-Def chain of a Value. This requires a number of steps. 1) Move value_use_iterator into the Value class as an implementation detail 2) Change it to actually be a *Use* iterator rather than a *User* iterator. 3) Add an adaptor which is a User iterator that always looks through the Use to the User. 4) Wrap these in Value::use_iterator and Value::user_iterator typedefs. 5) Add the range adaptors as Value::uses() and Value::users(). 6) Update *all* of the callers to correctly distinguish between whether they wanted a use_iterator (and to explicitly dig out the User when needed), or a user_iterator which makes the Use itself totally opaque. Because #6 requires churning essentially everything that walked the Use-Def chains, I went ahead and added all of the range adaptors and switched them to range-based loops where appropriate. Also because the renaming requires at least churning every line of code, it didn't make any sense to split these up into multiple commits -- all of which would touch all of the same lies of code. The result is still not quite optimal. The Value::use_iterator is a nice regular iterator, but Value::user_iterator is an iterator over User*s rather than over the User objects themselves. As a consequence, it fits a bit awkwardly into the range-based world and it has the weird extra-dereferencing 'operator->' that so many of our iterators have. I think this could be fixed by providing something which transforms a range of T&s into a range of T*s, but that *can* be separated into another patch, and it isn't yet 100% clear whether this is the right move. However, this change gets us most of the benefit and cleans up a substantial amount of code around Use and User. =] llvm-svn: 203364
2014-03-09 11:16:01 +08:00
Queue.push_back(&U);
}
// Conservative default is to not rewrite anything.
bool visitInstruction(Instruction &I) { return false; }
/// \brief Generic recursive split emission class.
template <typename Derived> class OpSplitter {
protected:
/// The builder used to form new instructions.
IRBuilderTy IRB;
/// The indices which to be used with insert- or extractvalue to select the
/// appropriate value within the aggregate.
SmallVector<unsigned, 4> Indices;
/// The indices to a GEP instruction which will move Ptr to the correct slot
/// within the aggregate.
SmallVector<Value *, 4> GEPIndices;
/// The base pointer of the original op, used as a base for GEPing the
/// split operations.
Value *Ptr;
/// Initialize the splitter with an insertion point, Ptr and start with a
/// single zero GEP index.
OpSplitter(Instruction *InsertionPoint, Value *Ptr)
: IRB(InsertionPoint), GEPIndices(1, IRB.getInt32(0)), Ptr(Ptr) {}
public:
/// \brief Generic recursive split emission routine.
///
/// This method recursively splits an aggregate op (load or store) into
/// scalar or vector ops. It splits recursively until it hits a single value
/// and emits that single value operation via the template argument.
///
/// The logic of this routine relies on GEPs and insertvalue and
/// extractvalue all operating with the same fundamental index list, merely
/// formatted differently (GEPs need actual values).
///
/// \param Ty The type being split recursively into smaller ops.
/// \param Agg The aggregate value being built up or stored, depending on
/// whether this is splitting a load or a store respectively.
void emitSplitOps(Type *Ty, Value *&Agg, const Twine &Name) {
if (Ty->isSingleValueType())
return static_cast<Derived *>(this)->emitFunc(Ty, Agg, Name);
if (ArrayType *ATy = dyn_cast<ArrayType>(Ty)) {
unsigned OldSize = Indices.size();
(void)OldSize;
for (unsigned Idx = 0, Size = ATy->getNumElements(); Idx != Size;
++Idx) {
assert(Indices.size() == OldSize && "Did not return to the old size");
Indices.push_back(Idx);
GEPIndices.push_back(IRB.getInt32(Idx));
emitSplitOps(ATy->getElementType(), Agg, Name + "." + Twine(Idx));
GEPIndices.pop_back();
Indices.pop_back();
}
return;
}
if (StructType *STy = dyn_cast<StructType>(Ty)) {
unsigned OldSize = Indices.size();
(void)OldSize;
for (unsigned Idx = 0, Size = STy->getNumElements(); Idx != Size;
++Idx) {
assert(Indices.size() == OldSize && "Did not return to the old size");
Indices.push_back(Idx);
GEPIndices.push_back(IRB.getInt32(Idx));
emitSplitOps(STy->getElementType(Idx), Agg, Name + "." + Twine(Idx));
GEPIndices.pop_back();
Indices.pop_back();
}
return;
}
llvm_unreachable("Only arrays and structs are aggregate loadable types");
}
};
struct LoadOpSplitter : public OpSplitter<LoadOpSplitter> {
LoadOpSplitter(Instruction *InsertionPoint, Value *Ptr)
: OpSplitter<LoadOpSplitter>(InsertionPoint, Ptr) {}
/// Emit a leaf load of a single value. This is called at the leaves of the
/// recursive emission to actually load values.
void emitFunc(Type *Ty, Value *&Agg, const Twine &Name) {
assert(Ty->isSingleValueType());
// Load the single value and insert it using the indices.
Value *GEP =
IRB.CreateInBoundsGEP(nullptr, Ptr, GEPIndices, Name + ".gep");
Value *Load = IRB.CreateLoad(GEP, Name + ".load");
Agg = IRB.CreateInsertValue(Agg, Load, Indices, Name + ".insert");
DEBUG(dbgs() << " to: " << *Load << "\n");
}
};
bool visitLoadInst(LoadInst &LI) {
assert(LI.getPointerOperand() == *U);
if (!LI.isSimple() || LI.getType()->isSingleValueType())
return false;
// We have an aggregate being loaded, split it apart.
DEBUG(dbgs() << " original: " << LI << "\n");
LoadOpSplitter Splitter(&LI, *U);
Value *V = UndefValue::get(LI.getType());
Splitter.emitSplitOps(LI.getType(), V, LI.getName() + ".fca");
LI.replaceAllUsesWith(V);
LI.eraseFromParent();
return true;
}
struct StoreOpSplitter : public OpSplitter<StoreOpSplitter> {
StoreOpSplitter(Instruction *InsertionPoint, Value *Ptr)
: OpSplitter<StoreOpSplitter>(InsertionPoint, Ptr) {}
/// Emit a leaf store of a single value. This is called at the leaves of the
/// recursive emission to actually produce stores.
void emitFunc(Type *Ty, Value *&Agg, const Twine &Name) {
assert(Ty->isSingleValueType());
// Extract the single value and store it using the indices.
Value *Store = IRB.CreateStore(
IRB.CreateExtractValue(Agg, Indices, Name + ".extract"),
IRB.CreateInBoundsGEP(nullptr, Ptr, GEPIndices, Name + ".gep"));
(void)Store;
DEBUG(dbgs() << " to: " << *Store << "\n");
}
};
bool visitStoreInst(StoreInst &SI) {
if (!SI.isSimple() || SI.getPointerOperand() != *U)
return false;
Value *V = SI.getValueOperand();
if (V->getType()->isSingleValueType())
return false;
// We have an aggregate being stored, split it apart.
DEBUG(dbgs() << " original: " << SI << "\n");
StoreOpSplitter Splitter(&SI, *U);
Splitter.emitSplitOps(V->getType(), V, V->getName() + ".fca");
SI.eraseFromParent();
return true;
}
bool visitBitCastInst(BitCastInst &BC) {
enqueueUsers(BC);
return false;
}
bool visitGetElementPtrInst(GetElementPtrInst &GEPI) {
enqueueUsers(GEPI);
return false;
}
bool visitPHINode(PHINode &PN) {
enqueueUsers(PN);
return false;
}
bool visitSelectInst(SelectInst &SI) {
enqueueUsers(SI);
return false;
}
};
}
/// \brief Strip aggregate type wrapping.
///
/// This removes no-op aggregate types wrapping an underlying type. It will
/// strip as many layers of types as it can without changing either the type
/// size or the allocated size.
static Type *stripAggregateTypeWrapping(const DataLayout &DL, Type *Ty) {
if (Ty->isSingleValueType())
return Ty;
uint64_t AllocSize = DL.getTypeAllocSize(Ty);
uint64_t TypeSize = DL.getTypeSizeInBits(Ty);
Type *InnerTy;
if (ArrayType *ArrTy = dyn_cast<ArrayType>(Ty)) {
InnerTy = ArrTy->getElementType();
} else if (StructType *STy = dyn_cast<StructType>(Ty)) {
const StructLayout *SL = DL.getStructLayout(STy);
unsigned Index = SL->getElementContainingOffset(0);
InnerTy = STy->getElementType(Index);
} else {
return Ty;
}
if (AllocSize > DL.getTypeAllocSize(InnerTy) ||
TypeSize > DL.getTypeSizeInBits(InnerTy))
return Ty;
return stripAggregateTypeWrapping(DL, InnerTy);
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
/// \brief Try to find a partition of the aggregate type passed in for a given
/// offset and size.
///
/// This recurses through the aggregate type and tries to compute a subtype
/// based on the offset and size. When the offset and size span a sub-section
/// of an array, it will even compute a new array type for that sub-section,
/// and the same for structs.
///
/// Note that this routine is very strict and tries to find a partition of the
/// type which produces the *exact* right offset and size. It is not forgiving
/// when the size or offset cause either end of type-based partition to be off.
/// Also, this is a best-effort routine. It is reasonable to give up and not
/// return a type if necessary.
static Type *getTypePartition(const DataLayout &DL, Type *Ty, uint64_t Offset,
uint64_t Size) {
if (Offset == 0 && DL.getTypeAllocSize(Ty) == Size)
return stripAggregateTypeWrapping(DL, Ty);
if (Offset > DL.getTypeAllocSize(Ty) ||
(DL.getTypeAllocSize(Ty) - Offset) < Size)
return nullptr;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
if (SequentialType *SeqTy = dyn_cast<SequentialType>(Ty)) {
// We can't partition pointers...
if (SeqTy->isPointerTy())
return nullptr;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
Type *ElementTy = SeqTy->getElementType();
uint64_t ElementSize = DL.getTypeAllocSize(ElementTy);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
uint64_t NumSkippedElements = Offset / ElementSize;
if (ArrayType *ArrTy = dyn_cast<ArrayType>(SeqTy)) {
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
if (NumSkippedElements >= ArrTy->getNumElements())
return nullptr;
} else if (VectorType *VecTy = dyn_cast<VectorType>(SeqTy)) {
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
if (NumSkippedElements >= VecTy->getNumElements())
return nullptr;
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
Offset -= NumSkippedElements * ElementSize;
// First check if we need to recurse.
if (Offset > 0 || Size < ElementSize) {
// Bail if the partition ends in a different array element.
if ((Offset + Size) > ElementSize)
return nullptr;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// Recurse through the element type trying to peel off offset bytes.
return getTypePartition(DL, ElementTy, Offset, Size);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
assert(Offset == 0);
if (Size == ElementSize)
return stripAggregateTypeWrapping(DL, ElementTy);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
assert(Size > ElementSize);
uint64_t NumElements = Size / ElementSize;
if (NumElements * ElementSize != Size)
return nullptr;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
return ArrayType::get(ElementTy, NumElements);
}
StructType *STy = dyn_cast<StructType>(Ty);
if (!STy)
return nullptr;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
const StructLayout *SL = DL.getStructLayout(STy);
if (Offset >= SL->getSizeInBytes())
return nullptr;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
uint64_t EndOffset = Offset + Size;
if (EndOffset > SL->getSizeInBytes())
return nullptr;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
unsigned Index = SL->getElementContainingOffset(Offset);
Offset -= SL->getElementOffset(Index);
Type *ElementTy = STy->getElementType(Index);
uint64_t ElementSize = DL.getTypeAllocSize(ElementTy);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
if (Offset >= ElementSize)
return nullptr; // The offset points into alignment padding.
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// See if any partition must be contained by the element.
if (Offset > 0 || Size < ElementSize) {
if ((Offset + Size) > ElementSize)
return nullptr;
return getTypePartition(DL, ElementTy, Offset, Size);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
assert(Offset == 0);
if (Size == ElementSize)
return stripAggregateTypeWrapping(DL, ElementTy);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
StructType::element_iterator EI = STy->element_begin() + Index,
EE = STy->element_end();
if (EndOffset < SL->getSizeInBytes()) {
unsigned EndIndex = SL->getElementContainingOffset(EndOffset);
if (Index == EndIndex)
return nullptr; // Within a single element and its padding.
// Don't try to form "natural" types if the elements don't line up with the
// expected size.
// FIXME: We could potentially recurse down through the last element in the
// sub-struct to find a natural end point.
if (SL->getElementOffset(EndIndex) != EndOffset)
return nullptr;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
assert(Index < EndIndex);
EE = STy->element_begin() + EndIndex;
}
// Try to build up a sub-structure.
StructType *SubTy =
StructType::get(STy->getContext(), makeArrayRef(EI, EE), STy->isPacked());
const StructLayout *SubSL = DL.getStructLayout(SubTy);
if (Size != SubSL->getSizeInBytes())
return nullptr; // The sub-struct doesn't have quite the size needed.
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
return SubTy;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
/// \brief Pre-split loads and stores to simplify rewriting.
///
/// We want to break up the splittable load+store pairs as much as
/// possible. This is important to do as a preprocessing step, as once we
/// start rewriting the accesses to partitions of the alloca we lose the
/// necessary information to correctly split apart paired loads and stores
/// which both point into this alloca. The case to consider is something like
/// the following:
///
/// %a = alloca [12 x i8]
/// %gep1 = getelementptr [12 x i8]* %a, i32 0, i32 0
/// %gep2 = getelementptr [12 x i8]* %a, i32 0, i32 4
/// %gep3 = getelementptr [12 x i8]* %a, i32 0, i32 8
/// %iptr1 = bitcast i8* %gep1 to i64*
/// %iptr2 = bitcast i8* %gep2 to i64*
/// %fptr1 = bitcast i8* %gep1 to float*
/// %fptr2 = bitcast i8* %gep2 to float*
/// %fptr3 = bitcast i8* %gep3 to float*
/// store float 0.0, float* %fptr1
/// store float 1.0, float* %fptr2
/// %v = load i64* %iptr1
/// store i64 %v, i64* %iptr2
/// %f1 = load float* %fptr2
/// %f2 = load float* %fptr3
///
/// Here we want to form 3 partitions of the alloca, each 4 bytes large, and
/// promote everything so we recover the 2 SSA values that should have been
/// there all along.
///
/// \returns true if any changes are made.
bool SROA::presplitLoadsAndStores(AllocaInst &AI, AllocaSlices &AS) {
DEBUG(dbgs() << "Pre-splitting loads and stores\n");
// Track the loads and stores which are candidates for pre-splitting here, in
// the order they first appear during the partition scan. These give stable
// iteration order and a basis for tracking which loads and stores we
// actually split.
SmallVector<LoadInst *, 4> Loads;
SmallVector<StoreInst *, 4> Stores;
// We need to accumulate the splits required of each load or store where we
// can find them via a direct lookup. This is important to cross-check loads
// and stores against each other. We also track the slice so that we can kill
// all the slices that end up split.
struct SplitOffsets {
Slice *S;
std::vector<uint64_t> Splits;
};
SmallDenseMap<Instruction *, SplitOffsets, 8> SplitOffsetsMap;
[SROA] Apply a somewhat heavy and unpleasant hammer to fix PR22093, an assert out of the new pre-splitting in SROA. This fix makes the code do what was originally intended -- when we have a store of a load both dealing in the same alloca, we force them to both be pre-split with identical offsets. This is really quite hard to do because we can keep discovering problems as we go along. We have to track every load over the current alloca which for any resaon becomes invalid for pre-splitting, and go back to remove all stores of those loads. I've included a couple of test cases derived from PR22093 that cover the different ways this can happen. While that PR only really triggered the first of these two, its the same fundamental issue. The other challenge here is documented in a FIXME now. We end up being quite a bit more aggressive for pre-splitting when loads and stores don't refer to the same alloca. This aggressiveness comes at the cost of introducing potentially redundant loads. It isn't clear that this is the right balance. It might be considerably better to require that we only do pre-splitting when we can presplit every load and store involved in the entire operation. That would give more consistent if conservative results. Unfortunately, it requires a non-trivial change to the actual pre-splitting operation in order to correctly handle cases where we end up pre-splitting stores out-of-order. And it isn't 100% clear that this is the right direction, although I'm starting to suspect that it is. llvm-svn: 225149
2015-01-05 12:17:53 +08:00
// Track loads out of this alloca which cannot, for any reason, be pre-split.
// This is important as we also cannot pre-split stores of those loads!
// FIXME: This is all pretty gross. It means that we can be more aggressive
// in pre-splitting when the load feeding the store happens to come from
// a separate alloca. Put another way, the effectiveness of SROA would be
// decreased by a frontend which just concatenated all of its local allocas
// into one big flat alloca. But defeating such patterns is exactly the job
// SROA is tasked with! Sadly, to not have this discrepancy we would have
// change store pre-splitting to actually force pre-splitting of the load
// that feeds it *and all stores*. That makes pre-splitting much harder, but
// maybe it would make it more principled?
SmallPtrSet<LoadInst *, 8> UnsplittableLoads;
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
DEBUG(dbgs() << " Searching for candidate loads and stores\n");
for (auto &P : AS.partitions()) {
for (Slice &S : P) {
[SROA] Apply a somewhat heavy and unpleasant hammer to fix PR22093, an assert out of the new pre-splitting in SROA. This fix makes the code do what was originally intended -- when we have a store of a load both dealing in the same alloca, we force them to both be pre-split with identical offsets. This is really quite hard to do because we can keep discovering problems as we go along. We have to track every load over the current alloca which for any resaon becomes invalid for pre-splitting, and go back to remove all stores of those loads. I've included a couple of test cases derived from PR22093 that cover the different ways this can happen. While that PR only really triggered the first of these two, its the same fundamental issue. The other challenge here is documented in a FIXME now. We end up being quite a bit more aggressive for pre-splitting when loads and stores don't refer to the same alloca. This aggressiveness comes at the cost of introducing potentially redundant loads. It isn't clear that this is the right balance. It might be considerably better to require that we only do pre-splitting when we can presplit every load and store involved in the entire operation. That would give more consistent if conservative results. Unfortunately, it requires a non-trivial change to the actual pre-splitting operation in order to correctly handle cases where we end up pre-splitting stores out-of-order. And it isn't 100% clear that this is the right direction, although I'm starting to suspect that it is. llvm-svn: 225149
2015-01-05 12:17:53 +08:00
Instruction *I = cast<Instruction>(S.getUse()->getUser());
if (!S.isSplittable() ||S.endOffset() <= P.endOffset()) {
// If this was a load we have to track that it can't participate in any
// pre-splitting!
if (auto *LI = dyn_cast<LoadInst>(I))
UnsplittableLoads.insert(LI);
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
continue;
[SROA] Apply a somewhat heavy and unpleasant hammer to fix PR22093, an assert out of the new pre-splitting in SROA. This fix makes the code do what was originally intended -- when we have a store of a load both dealing in the same alloca, we force them to both be pre-split with identical offsets. This is really quite hard to do because we can keep discovering problems as we go along. We have to track every load over the current alloca which for any resaon becomes invalid for pre-splitting, and go back to remove all stores of those loads. I've included a couple of test cases derived from PR22093 that cover the different ways this can happen. While that PR only really triggered the first of these two, its the same fundamental issue. The other challenge here is documented in a FIXME now. We end up being quite a bit more aggressive for pre-splitting when loads and stores don't refer to the same alloca. This aggressiveness comes at the cost of introducing potentially redundant loads. It isn't clear that this is the right balance. It might be considerably better to require that we only do pre-splitting when we can presplit every load and store involved in the entire operation. That would give more consistent if conservative results. Unfortunately, it requires a non-trivial change to the actual pre-splitting operation in order to correctly handle cases where we end up pre-splitting stores out-of-order. And it isn't 100% clear that this is the right direction, although I'm starting to suspect that it is. llvm-svn: 225149
2015-01-05 12:17:53 +08:00
}
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
assert(P.endOffset() > S.beginOffset() &&
"Empty or backwards partition!");
// Determine if this is a pre-splittable slice.
if (auto *LI = dyn_cast<LoadInst>(I)) {
assert(!LI->isVolatile() && "Cannot split volatile loads!");
// The load must be used exclusively to store into other pointers for
// us to be able to arbitrarily pre-split it. The stores must also be
// simple to avoid changing semantics.
auto IsLoadSimplyStored = [](LoadInst *LI) {
for (User *LU : LI->users()) {
auto *SI = dyn_cast<StoreInst>(LU);
if (!SI || !SI->isSimple())
return false;
}
return true;
};
[SROA] Apply a somewhat heavy and unpleasant hammer to fix PR22093, an assert out of the new pre-splitting in SROA. This fix makes the code do what was originally intended -- when we have a store of a load both dealing in the same alloca, we force them to both be pre-split with identical offsets. This is really quite hard to do because we can keep discovering problems as we go along. We have to track every load over the current alloca which for any resaon becomes invalid for pre-splitting, and go back to remove all stores of those loads. I've included a couple of test cases derived from PR22093 that cover the different ways this can happen. While that PR only really triggered the first of these two, its the same fundamental issue. The other challenge here is documented in a FIXME now. We end up being quite a bit more aggressive for pre-splitting when loads and stores don't refer to the same alloca. This aggressiveness comes at the cost of introducing potentially redundant loads. It isn't clear that this is the right balance. It might be considerably better to require that we only do pre-splitting when we can presplit every load and store involved in the entire operation. That would give more consistent if conservative results. Unfortunately, it requires a non-trivial change to the actual pre-splitting operation in order to correctly handle cases where we end up pre-splitting stores out-of-order. And it isn't 100% clear that this is the right direction, although I'm starting to suspect that it is. llvm-svn: 225149
2015-01-05 12:17:53 +08:00
if (!IsLoadSimplyStored(LI)) {
UnsplittableLoads.insert(LI);
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
continue;
[SROA] Apply a somewhat heavy and unpleasant hammer to fix PR22093, an assert out of the new pre-splitting in SROA. This fix makes the code do what was originally intended -- when we have a store of a load both dealing in the same alloca, we force them to both be pre-split with identical offsets. This is really quite hard to do because we can keep discovering problems as we go along. We have to track every load over the current alloca which for any resaon becomes invalid for pre-splitting, and go back to remove all stores of those loads. I've included a couple of test cases derived from PR22093 that cover the different ways this can happen. While that PR only really triggered the first of these two, its the same fundamental issue. The other challenge here is documented in a FIXME now. We end up being quite a bit more aggressive for pre-splitting when loads and stores don't refer to the same alloca. This aggressiveness comes at the cost of introducing potentially redundant loads. It isn't clear that this is the right balance. It might be considerably better to require that we only do pre-splitting when we can presplit every load and store involved in the entire operation. That would give more consistent if conservative results. Unfortunately, it requires a non-trivial change to the actual pre-splitting operation in order to correctly handle cases where we end up pre-splitting stores out-of-order. And it isn't 100% clear that this is the right direction, although I'm starting to suspect that it is. llvm-svn: 225149
2015-01-05 12:17:53 +08:00
}
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
Loads.push_back(LI);
} else if (auto *SI = dyn_cast<StoreInst>(S.getUse()->getUser())) {
if (!SI ||
S.getUse() != &SI->getOperandUse(SI->getPointerOperandIndex()))
continue;
auto *StoredLoad = dyn_cast<LoadInst>(SI->getValueOperand());
if (!StoredLoad || !StoredLoad->isSimple())
continue;
assert(!SI->isVolatile() && "Cannot split volatile stores!");
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
Stores.push_back(SI);
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
} else {
// Other uses cannot be pre-split.
continue;
}
// Record the initial split.
DEBUG(dbgs() << " Candidate: " << *I << "\n");
auto &Offsets = SplitOffsetsMap[I];
assert(Offsets.Splits.empty() &&
"Should not have splits the first time we see an instruction!");
Offsets.S = &S;
[SROA] Teach SROA to be more aggressive in splitting now that we have a pre-splitting pass over loads and stores. Historically, splitting could cause enough problems that I hamstrung the entire process with a requirement that splittable integer loads and stores must cover the entire alloca. All smaller loads and stores were unsplittable to prevent chaos from ensuing. With the new pre-splitting logic that does load/store pair splitting I introduced in r225061, we can now very nicely handle arbitrarily splittable loads and stores. In order to fully benefit from these smarts, we need to mark all of the integer loads and stores as splittable. However, we don't actually want to rewrite partitions with all integer loads and stores marked as splittable. This will fail to extract scalar integers from aggregates, which is kind of the point of SROA. =] In order to resolve this, what we really want to do is only do pre-splitting on the alloca slices with integer loads and stores fully splittable. This allows us to uncover all non-integer uses of the alloca that would benefit from a split in an integer load or store (and where introducing the split is safe because it is just memory transfer from a load to a store). Once done, we make all the non-whole-alloca integer loads and stores unsplittable just as they have historically been, repartition and rewrite. The result is that when there are integer loads and stores anywhere within an alloca (such as from a memcpy of a sub-object of a larger object), we can split them up if there are non-integer components to the aggregate hiding beneath. I've added the challenging test cases to demonstrate how this is able to promote to scalars even a case where we have even *partially* overlapping loads and stores. This restores the single-store behavior for small arrays of i8s which is really nice. I've restored both the little endian testing and big endian testing for these exactly as they were prior to r225061. It also forced me to be more aggressive in an alignment test to actually defeat SROA. =] Without the added volatiles there, we actually split up the weird i16 loads and produce nice double allocas with better alignment. This also uncovered a number of bugs where we failed to handle splittable load and store slices which didn't have a begininng offset of zero. Those fixes are included, and without them the existing test cases explode in glorious fireworks. =] I've kept support for leaving whole-alloca integer loads and stores as splittable even for the purpose of rewriting, but I think that's likely no longer needed. With the new pre-splitting, we might be able to remove all the splitting support for loads and stores from the rewriter. Not doing that in this patch to try to isolate any performance regressions that causes in an easy to find and revert chunk. llvm-svn: 225074
2015-01-02 11:55:54 +08:00
Offsets.Splits.push_back(P.endOffset() - S.beginOffset());
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
}
// Now scan the already split slices, and add a split for any of them which
// we're going to pre-split.
for (Slice *S : P.splitSliceTails()) {
auto SplitOffsetsMapI =
SplitOffsetsMap.find(cast<Instruction>(S->getUse()->getUser()));
if (SplitOffsetsMapI == SplitOffsetsMap.end())
continue;
auto &Offsets = SplitOffsetsMapI->second;
assert(Offsets.S == S && "Found a mismatched slice!");
assert(!Offsets.Splits.empty() &&
"Cannot have an empty set of splits on the second partition!");
[SROA] Teach SROA to be more aggressive in splitting now that we have a pre-splitting pass over loads and stores. Historically, splitting could cause enough problems that I hamstrung the entire process with a requirement that splittable integer loads and stores must cover the entire alloca. All smaller loads and stores were unsplittable to prevent chaos from ensuing. With the new pre-splitting logic that does load/store pair splitting I introduced in r225061, we can now very nicely handle arbitrarily splittable loads and stores. In order to fully benefit from these smarts, we need to mark all of the integer loads and stores as splittable. However, we don't actually want to rewrite partitions with all integer loads and stores marked as splittable. This will fail to extract scalar integers from aggregates, which is kind of the point of SROA. =] In order to resolve this, what we really want to do is only do pre-splitting on the alloca slices with integer loads and stores fully splittable. This allows us to uncover all non-integer uses of the alloca that would benefit from a split in an integer load or store (and where introducing the split is safe because it is just memory transfer from a load to a store). Once done, we make all the non-whole-alloca integer loads and stores unsplittable just as they have historically been, repartition and rewrite. The result is that when there are integer loads and stores anywhere within an alloca (such as from a memcpy of a sub-object of a larger object), we can split them up if there are non-integer components to the aggregate hiding beneath. I've added the challenging test cases to demonstrate how this is able to promote to scalars even a case where we have even *partially* overlapping loads and stores. This restores the single-store behavior for small arrays of i8s which is really nice. I've restored both the little endian testing and big endian testing for these exactly as they were prior to r225061. It also forced me to be more aggressive in an alignment test to actually defeat SROA. =] Without the added volatiles there, we actually split up the weird i16 loads and produce nice double allocas with better alignment. This also uncovered a number of bugs where we failed to handle splittable load and store slices which didn't have a begininng offset of zero. Those fixes are included, and without them the existing test cases explode in glorious fireworks. =] I've kept support for leaving whole-alloca integer loads and stores as splittable even for the purpose of rewriting, but I think that's likely no longer needed. With the new pre-splitting, we might be able to remove all the splitting support for loads and stores from the rewriter. Not doing that in this patch to try to isolate any performance regressions that causes in an easy to find and revert chunk. llvm-svn: 225074
2015-01-02 11:55:54 +08:00
assert(Offsets.Splits.back() ==
P.beginOffset() - Offsets.S->beginOffset() &&
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
"Previous split does not end where this one begins!");
// Record each split. The last partition's end isn't needed as the size
// of the slice dictates that.
if (S->endOffset() > P.endOffset())
[SROA] Teach SROA to be more aggressive in splitting now that we have a pre-splitting pass over loads and stores. Historically, splitting could cause enough problems that I hamstrung the entire process with a requirement that splittable integer loads and stores must cover the entire alloca. All smaller loads and stores were unsplittable to prevent chaos from ensuing. With the new pre-splitting logic that does load/store pair splitting I introduced in r225061, we can now very nicely handle arbitrarily splittable loads and stores. In order to fully benefit from these smarts, we need to mark all of the integer loads and stores as splittable. However, we don't actually want to rewrite partitions with all integer loads and stores marked as splittable. This will fail to extract scalar integers from aggregates, which is kind of the point of SROA. =] In order to resolve this, what we really want to do is only do pre-splitting on the alloca slices with integer loads and stores fully splittable. This allows us to uncover all non-integer uses of the alloca that would benefit from a split in an integer load or store (and where introducing the split is safe because it is just memory transfer from a load to a store). Once done, we make all the non-whole-alloca integer loads and stores unsplittable just as they have historically been, repartition and rewrite. The result is that when there are integer loads and stores anywhere within an alloca (such as from a memcpy of a sub-object of a larger object), we can split them up if there are non-integer components to the aggregate hiding beneath. I've added the challenging test cases to demonstrate how this is able to promote to scalars even a case where we have even *partially* overlapping loads and stores. This restores the single-store behavior for small arrays of i8s which is really nice. I've restored both the little endian testing and big endian testing for these exactly as they were prior to r225061. It also forced me to be more aggressive in an alignment test to actually defeat SROA. =] Without the added volatiles there, we actually split up the weird i16 loads and produce nice double allocas with better alignment. This also uncovered a number of bugs where we failed to handle splittable load and store slices which didn't have a begininng offset of zero. Those fixes are included, and without them the existing test cases explode in glorious fireworks. =] I've kept support for leaving whole-alloca integer loads and stores as splittable even for the purpose of rewriting, but I think that's likely no longer needed. With the new pre-splitting, we might be able to remove all the splitting support for loads and stores from the rewriter. Not doing that in this patch to try to isolate any performance regressions that causes in an easy to find and revert chunk. llvm-svn: 225074
2015-01-02 11:55:54 +08:00
Offsets.Splits.push_back(P.endOffset() - Offsets.S->beginOffset());
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
}
}
// We may have split loads where some of their stores are split stores. For
// such loads and stores, we can only pre-split them if their splits exactly
// match relative to their starting offset. We have to verify this prior to
// any rewriting.
Stores.erase(
std::remove_if(Stores.begin(), Stores.end(),
[SROA] Apply a somewhat heavy and unpleasant hammer to fix PR22093, an assert out of the new pre-splitting in SROA. This fix makes the code do what was originally intended -- when we have a store of a load both dealing in the same alloca, we force them to both be pre-split with identical offsets. This is really quite hard to do because we can keep discovering problems as we go along. We have to track every load over the current alloca which for any resaon becomes invalid for pre-splitting, and go back to remove all stores of those loads. I've included a couple of test cases derived from PR22093 that cover the different ways this can happen. While that PR only really triggered the first of these two, its the same fundamental issue. The other challenge here is documented in a FIXME now. We end up being quite a bit more aggressive for pre-splitting when loads and stores don't refer to the same alloca. This aggressiveness comes at the cost of introducing potentially redundant loads. It isn't clear that this is the right balance. It might be considerably better to require that we only do pre-splitting when we can presplit every load and store involved in the entire operation. That would give more consistent if conservative results. Unfortunately, it requires a non-trivial change to the actual pre-splitting operation in order to correctly handle cases where we end up pre-splitting stores out-of-order. And it isn't 100% clear that this is the right direction, although I'm starting to suspect that it is. llvm-svn: 225149
2015-01-05 12:17:53 +08:00
[&UnsplittableLoads, &SplitOffsetsMap](StoreInst *SI) {
// Lookup the load we are storing in our map of split
// offsets.
auto *LI = cast<LoadInst>(SI->getValueOperand());
[SROA] Apply a somewhat heavy and unpleasant hammer to fix PR22093, an assert out of the new pre-splitting in SROA. This fix makes the code do what was originally intended -- when we have a store of a load both dealing in the same alloca, we force them to both be pre-split with identical offsets. This is really quite hard to do because we can keep discovering problems as we go along. We have to track every load over the current alloca which for any resaon becomes invalid for pre-splitting, and go back to remove all stores of those loads. I've included a couple of test cases derived from PR22093 that cover the different ways this can happen. While that PR only really triggered the first of these two, its the same fundamental issue. The other challenge here is documented in a FIXME now. We end up being quite a bit more aggressive for pre-splitting when loads and stores don't refer to the same alloca. This aggressiveness comes at the cost of introducing potentially redundant loads. It isn't clear that this is the right balance. It might be considerably better to require that we only do pre-splitting when we can presplit every load and store involved in the entire operation. That would give more consistent if conservative results. Unfortunately, it requires a non-trivial change to the actual pre-splitting operation in order to correctly handle cases where we end up pre-splitting stores out-of-order. And it isn't 100% clear that this is the right direction, although I'm starting to suspect that it is. llvm-svn: 225149
2015-01-05 12:17:53 +08:00
// If it was completely unsplittable, then we're done,
// and this store can't be pre-split.
if (UnsplittableLoads.count(LI))
return true;
auto LoadOffsetsI = SplitOffsetsMap.find(LI);
if (LoadOffsetsI == SplitOffsetsMap.end())
[SROA] Apply a somewhat heavy and unpleasant hammer to fix PR22093, an assert out of the new pre-splitting in SROA. This fix makes the code do what was originally intended -- when we have a store of a load both dealing in the same alloca, we force them to both be pre-split with identical offsets. This is really quite hard to do because we can keep discovering problems as we go along. We have to track every load over the current alloca which for any resaon becomes invalid for pre-splitting, and go back to remove all stores of those loads. I've included a couple of test cases derived from PR22093 that cover the different ways this can happen. While that PR only really triggered the first of these two, its the same fundamental issue. The other challenge here is documented in a FIXME now. We end up being quite a bit more aggressive for pre-splitting when loads and stores don't refer to the same alloca. This aggressiveness comes at the cost of introducing potentially redundant loads. It isn't clear that this is the right balance. It might be considerably better to require that we only do pre-splitting when we can presplit every load and store involved in the entire operation. That would give more consistent if conservative results. Unfortunately, it requires a non-trivial change to the actual pre-splitting operation in order to correctly handle cases where we end up pre-splitting stores out-of-order. And it isn't 100% clear that this is the right direction, although I'm starting to suspect that it is. llvm-svn: 225149
2015-01-05 12:17:53 +08:00
return false; // Unrelated loads are definitely safe.
auto &LoadOffsets = LoadOffsetsI->second;
// Now lookup the store's offsets.
auto &StoreOffsets = SplitOffsetsMap[SI];
// If the relative offsets of each split in the load and
// store match exactly, then we can split them and we
// don't need to remove them here.
if (LoadOffsets.Splits == StoreOffsets.Splits)
return false;
DEBUG(dbgs()
<< " Mismatched splits for load and store:\n"
<< " " << *LI << "\n"
<< " " << *SI << "\n");
// We've found a store and load that we need to split
// with mismatched relative splits. Just give up on them
// and remove both instructions from our list of
// candidates.
[SROA] Apply a somewhat heavy and unpleasant hammer to fix PR22093, an assert out of the new pre-splitting in SROA. This fix makes the code do what was originally intended -- when we have a store of a load both dealing in the same alloca, we force them to both be pre-split with identical offsets. This is really quite hard to do because we can keep discovering problems as we go along. We have to track every load over the current alloca which for any resaon becomes invalid for pre-splitting, and go back to remove all stores of those loads. I've included a couple of test cases derived from PR22093 that cover the different ways this can happen. While that PR only really triggered the first of these two, its the same fundamental issue. The other challenge here is documented in a FIXME now. We end up being quite a bit more aggressive for pre-splitting when loads and stores don't refer to the same alloca. This aggressiveness comes at the cost of introducing potentially redundant loads. It isn't clear that this is the right balance. It might be considerably better to require that we only do pre-splitting when we can presplit every load and store involved in the entire operation. That would give more consistent if conservative results. Unfortunately, it requires a non-trivial change to the actual pre-splitting operation in order to correctly handle cases where we end up pre-splitting stores out-of-order. And it isn't 100% clear that this is the right direction, although I'm starting to suspect that it is. llvm-svn: 225149
2015-01-05 12:17:53 +08:00
UnsplittableLoads.insert(LI);
return true;
}),
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
Stores.end());
// Now we have to go *back* through all the stores, because a later store may
[SROA] Apply a somewhat heavy and unpleasant hammer to fix PR22093, an assert out of the new pre-splitting in SROA. This fix makes the code do what was originally intended -- when we have a store of a load both dealing in the same alloca, we force them to both be pre-split with identical offsets. This is really quite hard to do because we can keep discovering problems as we go along. We have to track every load over the current alloca which for any resaon becomes invalid for pre-splitting, and go back to remove all stores of those loads. I've included a couple of test cases derived from PR22093 that cover the different ways this can happen. While that PR only really triggered the first of these two, its the same fundamental issue. The other challenge here is documented in a FIXME now. We end up being quite a bit more aggressive for pre-splitting when loads and stores don't refer to the same alloca. This aggressiveness comes at the cost of introducing potentially redundant loads. It isn't clear that this is the right balance. It might be considerably better to require that we only do pre-splitting when we can presplit every load and store involved in the entire operation. That would give more consistent if conservative results. Unfortunately, it requires a non-trivial change to the actual pre-splitting operation in order to correctly handle cases where we end up pre-splitting stores out-of-order. And it isn't 100% clear that this is the right direction, although I'm starting to suspect that it is. llvm-svn: 225149
2015-01-05 12:17:53 +08:00
// have caused an earlier store's load to become unsplittable and if it is
// unsplittable for the later store, then we can't rely on it being split in
// the earlier store either.
Stores.erase(std::remove_if(Stores.begin(), Stores.end(),
[&UnsplittableLoads](StoreInst *SI) {
auto *LI =
cast<LoadInst>(SI->getValueOperand());
return UnsplittableLoads.count(LI);
}),
Stores.end());
// Once we've established all the loads that can't be split for some reason,
// filter any that made it into our list out.
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
Loads.erase(std::remove_if(Loads.begin(), Loads.end(),
[SROA] Apply a somewhat heavy and unpleasant hammer to fix PR22093, an assert out of the new pre-splitting in SROA. This fix makes the code do what was originally intended -- when we have a store of a load both dealing in the same alloca, we force them to both be pre-split with identical offsets. This is really quite hard to do because we can keep discovering problems as we go along. We have to track every load over the current alloca which for any resaon becomes invalid for pre-splitting, and go back to remove all stores of those loads. I've included a couple of test cases derived from PR22093 that cover the different ways this can happen. While that PR only really triggered the first of these two, its the same fundamental issue. The other challenge here is documented in a FIXME now. We end up being quite a bit more aggressive for pre-splitting when loads and stores don't refer to the same alloca. This aggressiveness comes at the cost of introducing potentially redundant loads. It isn't clear that this is the right balance. It might be considerably better to require that we only do pre-splitting when we can presplit every load and store involved in the entire operation. That would give more consistent if conservative results. Unfortunately, it requires a non-trivial change to the actual pre-splitting operation in order to correctly handle cases where we end up pre-splitting stores out-of-order. And it isn't 100% clear that this is the right direction, although I'm starting to suspect that it is. llvm-svn: 225149
2015-01-05 12:17:53 +08:00
[&UnsplittableLoads](LoadInst *LI) {
return UnsplittableLoads.count(LI);
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
}),
Loads.end());
[SROA] Apply a somewhat heavy and unpleasant hammer to fix PR22093, an assert out of the new pre-splitting in SROA. This fix makes the code do what was originally intended -- when we have a store of a load both dealing in the same alloca, we force them to both be pre-split with identical offsets. This is really quite hard to do because we can keep discovering problems as we go along. We have to track every load over the current alloca which for any resaon becomes invalid for pre-splitting, and go back to remove all stores of those loads. I've included a couple of test cases derived from PR22093 that cover the different ways this can happen. While that PR only really triggered the first of these two, its the same fundamental issue. The other challenge here is documented in a FIXME now. We end up being quite a bit more aggressive for pre-splitting when loads and stores don't refer to the same alloca. This aggressiveness comes at the cost of introducing potentially redundant loads. It isn't clear that this is the right balance. It might be considerably better to require that we only do pre-splitting when we can presplit every load and store involved in the entire operation. That would give more consistent if conservative results. Unfortunately, it requires a non-trivial change to the actual pre-splitting operation in order to correctly handle cases where we end up pre-splitting stores out-of-order. And it isn't 100% clear that this is the right direction, although I'm starting to suspect that it is. llvm-svn: 225149
2015-01-05 12:17:53 +08:00
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
// If no loads or stores are left, there is no pre-splitting to be done for
// this alloca.
if (Loads.empty() && Stores.empty())
return false;
// From here on, we can't fail and will be building new accesses, so rig up
// an IR builder.
IRBuilderTy IRB(&AI);
// Collect the new slices which we will merge into the alloca slices.
SmallVector<Slice, 4> NewSlices;
// Track any allocas we end up splitting loads and stores for so we iterate
// on them.
SmallPtrSet<AllocaInst *, 4> ResplitPromotableAllocas;
// At this point, we have collected all of the loads and stores we can
// pre-split, and the specific splits needed for them. We actually do the
// splitting in a specific order in order to handle when one of the loads in
// the value operand to one of the stores.
//
// First, we rewrite all of the split loads, and just accumulate each split
// load in a parallel structure. We also build the slices for them and append
// them to the alloca slices.
SmallDenseMap<LoadInst *, std::vector<LoadInst *>, 1> SplitLoadsMap;
std::vector<LoadInst *> SplitLoads;
const DataLayout &DL = AI.getModule()->getDataLayout();
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
for (LoadInst *LI : Loads) {
SplitLoads.clear();
IntegerType *Ty = cast<IntegerType>(LI->getType());
uint64_t LoadSize = Ty->getBitWidth() / 8;
assert(LoadSize > 0 && "Cannot have a zero-sized integer load!");
auto &Offsets = SplitOffsetsMap[LI];
assert(LoadSize == Offsets.S->endOffset() - Offsets.S->beginOffset() &&
"Slice size should always match load size exactly!");
uint64_t BaseOffset = Offsets.S->beginOffset();
assert(BaseOffset + LoadSize > BaseOffset &&
"Cannot represent alloca access size using 64-bit integers!");
Instruction *BasePtr = cast<Instruction>(LI->getPointerOperand());
IRB.SetInsertPoint(LI);
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
DEBUG(dbgs() << " Splitting load: " << *LI << "\n");
uint64_t PartOffset = 0, PartSize = Offsets.Splits.front();
int Idx = 0, Size = Offsets.Splits.size();
for (;;) {
auto *PartTy = Type::getIntNTy(Ty->getContext(), PartSize * 8);
auto *PartPtrTy = PartTy->getPointerTo(LI->getPointerAddressSpace());
LoadInst *PLoad = IRB.CreateAlignedLoad(
getAdjustedPtr(IRB, DL, BasePtr,
APInt(DL.getPointerSizeInBits(), PartOffset),
PartPtrTy, BasePtr->getName() + "."),
getAdjustedAlignment(LI, PartOffset, DL), /*IsVolatile*/ false,
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
LI->getName());
// Append this load onto the list of split loads so we can find it later
// to rewrite the stores.
SplitLoads.push_back(PLoad);
// Now build a new slice for the alloca.
NewSlices.push_back(
Slice(BaseOffset + PartOffset, BaseOffset + PartOffset + PartSize,
&PLoad->getOperandUse(PLoad->getPointerOperandIndex()),
[SROA] Teach SROA to be more aggressive in splitting now that we have a pre-splitting pass over loads and stores. Historically, splitting could cause enough problems that I hamstrung the entire process with a requirement that splittable integer loads and stores must cover the entire alloca. All smaller loads and stores were unsplittable to prevent chaos from ensuing. With the new pre-splitting logic that does load/store pair splitting I introduced in r225061, we can now very nicely handle arbitrarily splittable loads and stores. In order to fully benefit from these smarts, we need to mark all of the integer loads and stores as splittable. However, we don't actually want to rewrite partitions with all integer loads and stores marked as splittable. This will fail to extract scalar integers from aggregates, which is kind of the point of SROA. =] In order to resolve this, what we really want to do is only do pre-splitting on the alloca slices with integer loads and stores fully splittable. This allows us to uncover all non-integer uses of the alloca that would benefit from a split in an integer load or store (and where introducing the split is safe because it is just memory transfer from a load to a store). Once done, we make all the non-whole-alloca integer loads and stores unsplittable just as they have historically been, repartition and rewrite. The result is that when there are integer loads and stores anywhere within an alloca (such as from a memcpy of a sub-object of a larger object), we can split them up if there are non-integer components to the aggregate hiding beneath. I've added the challenging test cases to demonstrate how this is able to promote to scalars even a case where we have even *partially* overlapping loads and stores. This restores the single-store behavior for small arrays of i8s which is really nice. I've restored both the little endian testing and big endian testing for these exactly as they were prior to r225061. It also forced me to be more aggressive in an alignment test to actually defeat SROA. =] Without the added volatiles there, we actually split up the weird i16 loads and produce nice double allocas with better alignment. This also uncovered a number of bugs where we failed to handle splittable load and store slices which didn't have a begininng offset of zero. Those fixes are included, and without them the existing test cases explode in glorious fireworks. =] I've kept support for leaving whole-alloca integer loads and stores as splittable even for the purpose of rewriting, but I think that's likely no longer needed. With the new pre-splitting, we might be able to remove all the splitting support for loads and stores from the rewriter. Not doing that in this patch to try to isolate any performance regressions that causes in an easy to find and revert chunk. llvm-svn: 225074
2015-01-02 11:55:54 +08:00
/*IsSplittable*/ false));
DEBUG(dbgs() << " new slice [" << NewSlices.back().beginOffset()
<< ", " << NewSlices.back().endOffset() << "): " << *PLoad
<< "\n");
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
// See if we've handled all the splits.
if (Idx >= Size)
break;
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
// Setup the next partition.
PartOffset = Offsets.Splits[Idx];
++Idx;
PartSize = (Idx < Size ? Offsets.Splits[Idx] : LoadSize) - PartOffset;
}
// Now that we have the split loads, do the slow walk over all uses of the
// load and rewrite them as split stores, or save the split loads to use
// below if the store is going to be split there anyways.
bool DeferredStores = false;
for (User *LU : LI->users()) {
StoreInst *SI = cast<StoreInst>(LU);
if (!Stores.empty() && SplitOffsetsMap.count(SI)) {
DeferredStores = true;
DEBUG(dbgs() << " Deferred splitting of store: " << *SI << "\n");
continue;
}
Value *StoreBasePtr = SI->getPointerOperand();
IRB.SetInsertPoint(SI);
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
DEBUG(dbgs() << " Splitting store of load: " << *SI << "\n");
for (int Idx = 0, Size = SplitLoads.size(); Idx < Size; ++Idx) {
LoadInst *PLoad = SplitLoads[Idx];
uint64_t PartOffset = Idx == 0 ? 0 : Offsets.Splits[Idx - 1];
auto *PartPtrTy =
PLoad->getType()->getPointerTo(SI->getPointerAddressSpace());
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
StoreInst *PStore = IRB.CreateAlignedStore(
PLoad, getAdjustedPtr(IRB, DL, StoreBasePtr,
APInt(DL.getPointerSizeInBits(), PartOffset),
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
PartPtrTy, StoreBasePtr->getName() + "."),
getAdjustedAlignment(SI, PartOffset, DL), /*IsVolatile*/ false);
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
(void)PStore;
DEBUG(dbgs() << " +" << PartOffset << ":" << *PStore << "\n");
}
// We want to immediately iterate on any allocas impacted by splitting
// this store, and we have to track any promotable alloca (indicated by
// a direct store) as needing to be resplit because it is no longer
// promotable.
if (AllocaInst *OtherAI = dyn_cast<AllocaInst>(StoreBasePtr)) {
ResplitPromotableAllocas.insert(OtherAI);
Worklist.insert(OtherAI);
} else if (AllocaInst *OtherAI = dyn_cast<AllocaInst>(
StoreBasePtr->stripInBoundsOffsets())) {
Worklist.insert(OtherAI);
}
// Mark the original store as dead.
DeadInsts.insert(SI);
}
// Save the split loads if there are deferred stores among the users.
if (DeferredStores)
SplitLoadsMap.insert(std::make_pair(LI, std::move(SplitLoads)));
// Mark the original load as dead and kill the original slice.
DeadInsts.insert(LI);
Offsets.S->kill();
}
// Second, we rewrite all of the split stores. At this point, we know that
// all loads from this alloca have been split already. For stores of such
// loads, we can simply look up the pre-existing split loads. For stores of
// other loads, we split those loads first and then write split stores of
// them.
for (StoreInst *SI : Stores) {
auto *LI = cast<LoadInst>(SI->getValueOperand());
IntegerType *Ty = cast<IntegerType>(LI->getType());
uint64_t StoreSize = Ty->getBitWidth() / 8;
assert(StoreSize > 0 && "Cannot have a zero-sized integer store!");
auto &Offsets = SplitOffsetsMap[SI];
assert(StoreSize == Offsets.S->endOffset() - Offsets.S->beginOffset() &&
"Slice size should always match load size exactly!");
uint64_t BaseOffset = Offsets.S->beginOffset();
assert(BaseOffset + StoreSize > BaseOffset &&
"Cannot represent alloca access size using 64-bit integers!");
Value *LoadBasePtr = LI->getPointerOperand();
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
Instruction *StoreBasePtr = cast<Instruction>(SI->getPointerOperand());
DEBUG(dbgs() << " Splitting store: " << *SI << "\n");
// Check whether we have an already split load.
auto SplitLoadsMapI = SplitLoadsMap.find(LI);
std::vector<LoadInst *> *SplitLoads = nullptr;
if (SplitLoadsMapI != SplitLoadsMap.end()) {
SplitLoads = &SplitLoadsMapI->second;
assert(SplitLoads->size() == Offsets.Splits.size() + 1 &&
"Too few split loads for the number of splits in the store!");
} else {
DEBUG(dbgs() << " of load: " << *LI << "\n");
}
uint64_t PartOffset = 0, PartSize = Offsets.Splits.front();
int Idx = 0, Size = Offsets.Splits.size();
for (;;) {
auto *PartTy = Type::getIntNTy(Ty->getContext(), PartSize * 8);
auto *PartPtrTy = PartTy->getPointerTo(SI->getPointerAddressSpace());
// Either lookup a split load or create one.
LoadInst *PLoad;
if (SplitLoads) {
PLoad = (*SplitLoads)[Idx];
} else {
IRB.SetInsertPoint(LI);
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
PLoad = IRB.CreateAlignedLoad(
getAdjustedPtr(IRB, DL, LoadBasePtr,
APInt(DL.getPointerSizeInBits(), PartOffset),
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
PartPtrTy, LoadBasePtr->getName() + "."),
getAdjustedAlignment(LI, PartOffset, DL), /*IsVolatile*/ false,
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
LI->getName());
}
// And store this partition.
IRB.SetInsertPoint(SI);
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
StoreInst *PStore = IRB.CreateAlignedStore(
PLoad, getAdjustedPtr(IRB, DL, StoreBasePtr,
APInt(DL.getPointerSizeInBits(), PartOffset),
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
PartPtrTy, StoreBasePtr->getName() + "."),
getAdjustedAlignment(SI, PartOffset, DL), /*IsVolatile*/ false);
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
// Now build a new slice for the alloca.
NewSlices.push_back(
Slice(BaseOffset + PartOffset, BaseOffset + PartOffset + PartSize,
&PStore->getOperandUse(PStore->getPointerOperandIndex()),
[SROA] Teach SROA to be more aggressive in splitting now that we have a pre-splitting pass over loads and stores. Historically, splitting could cause enough problems that I hamstrung the entire process with a requirement that splittable integer loads and stores must cover the entire alloca. All smaller loads and stores were unsplittable to prevent chaos from ensuing. With the new pre-splitting logic that does load/store pair splitting I introduced in r225061, we can now very nicely handle arbitrarily splittable loads and stores. In order to fully benefit from these smarts, we need to mark all of the integer loads and stores as splittable. However, we don't actually want to rewrite partitions with all integer loads and stores marked as splittable. This will fail to extract scalar integers from aggregates, which is kind of the point of SROA. =] In order to resolve this, what we really want to do is only do pre-splitting on the alloca slices with integer loads and stores fully splittable. This allows us to uncover all non-integer uses of the alloca that would benefit from a split in an integer load or store (and where introducing the split is safe because it is just memory transfer from a load to a store). Once done, we make all the non-whole-alloca integer loads and stores unsplittable just as they have historically been, repartition and rewrite. The result is that when there are integer loads and stores anywhere within an alloca (such as from a memcpy of a sub-object of a larger object), we can split them up if there are non-integer components to the aggregate hiding beneath. I've added the challenging test cases to demonstrate how this is able to promote to scalars even a case where we have even *partially* overlapping loads and stores. This restores the single-store behavior for small arrays of i8s which is really nice. I've restored both the little endian testing and big endian testing for these exactly as they were prior to r225061. It also forced me to be more aggressive in an alignment test to actually defeat SROA. =] Without the added volatiles there, we actually split up the weird i16 loads and produce nice double allocas with better alignment. This also uncovered a number of bugs where we failed to handle splittable load and store slices which didn't have a begininng offset of zero. Those fixes are included, and without them the existing test cases explode in glorious fireworks. =] I've kept support for leaving whole-alloca integer loads and stores as splittable even for the purpose of rewriting, but I think that's likely no longer needed. With the new pre-splitting, we might be able to remove all the splitting support for loads and stores from the rewriter. Not doing that in this patch to try to isolate any performance regressions that causes in an easy to find and revert chunk. llvm-svn: 225074
2015-01-02 11:55:54 +08:00
/*IsSplittable*/ false));
DEBUG(dbgs() << " new slice [" << NewSlices.back().beginOffset()
<< ", " << NewSlices.back().endOffset() << "): " << *PStore
<< "\n");
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
if (!SplitLoads) {
DEBUG(dbgs() << " of split load: " << *PLoad << "\n");
}
// See if we've finished all the splits.
if (Idx >= Size)
break;
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
// Setup the next partition.
PartOffset = Offsets.Splits[Idx];
++Idx;
PartSize = (Idx < Size ? Offsets.Splits[Idx] : StoreSize) - PartOffset;
}
// We want to immediately iterate on any allocas impacted by splitting
// this load, which is only relevant if it isn't a load of this alloca and
// thus we didn't already split the loads above. We also have to keep track
// of any promotable allocas we split loads on as they can no longer be
// promoted.
if (!SplitLoads) {
if (AllocaInst *OtherAI = dyn_cast<AllocaInst>(LoadBasePtr)) {
assert(OtherAI != &AI && "We can't re-split our own alloca!");
ResplitPromotableAllocas.insert(OtherAI);
Worklist.insert(OtherAI);
} else if (AllocaInst *OtherAI = dyn_cast<AllocaInst>(
LoadBasePtr->stripInBoundsOffsets())) {
assert(OtherAI != &AI && "We can't re-split our own alloca!");
Worklist.insert(OtherAI);
}
}
// Mark the original store as dead now that we've split it up and kill its
[SROA] Teach SROA to be more aggressive in splitting now that we have a pre-splitting pass over loads and stores. Historically, splitting could cause enough problems that I hamstrung the entire process with a requirement that splittable integer loads and stores must cover the entire alloca. All smaller loads and stores were unsplittable to prevent chaos from ensuing. With the new pre-splitting logic that does load/store pair splitting I introduced in r225061, we can now very nicely handle arbitrarily splittable loads and stores. In order to fully benefit from these smarts, we need to mark all of the integer loads and stores as splittable. However, we don't actually want to rewrite partitions with all integer loads and stores marked as splittable. This will fail to extract scalar integers from aggregates, which is kind of the point of SROA. =] In order to resolve this, what we really want to do is only do pre-splitting on the alloca slices with integer loads and stores fully splittable. This allows us to uncover all non-integer uses of the alloca that would benefit from a split in an integer load or store (and where introducing the split is safe because it is just memory transfer from a load to a store). Once done, we make all the non-whole-alloca integer loads and stores unsplittable just as they have historically been, repartition and rewrite. The result is that when there are integer loads and stores anywhere within an alloca (such as from a memcpy of a sub-object of a larger object), we can split them up if there are non-integer components to the aggregate hiding beneath. I've added the challenging test cases to demonstrate how this is able to promote to scalars even a case where we have even *partially* overlapping loads and stores. This restores the single-store behavior for small arrays of i8s which is really nice. I've restored both the little endian testing and big endian testing for these exactly as they were prior to r225061. It also forced me to be more aggressive in an alignment test to actually defeat SROA. =] Without the added volatiles there, we actually split up the weird i16 loads and produce nice double allocas with better alignment. This also uncovered a number of bugs where we failed to handle splittable load and store slices which didn't have a begininng offset of zero. Those fixes are included, and without them the existing test cases explode in glorious fireworks. =] I've kept support for leaving whole-alloca integer loads and stores as splittable even for the purpose of rewriting, but I think that's likely no longer needed. With the new pre-splitting, we might be able to remove all the splitting support for loads and stores from the rewriter. Not doing that in this patch to try to isolate any performance regressions that causes in an easy to find and revert chunk. llvm-svn: 225074
2015-01-02 11:55:54 +08:00
// slice. Note that we leave the original load in place unless this store
// was its only use. It may in turn be split up if it is an alloca load
[SROA] Teach SROA to be more aggressive in splitting now that we have a pre-splitting pass over loads and stores. Historically, splitting could cause enough problems that I hamstrung the entire process with a requirement that splittable integer loads and stores must cover the entire alloca. All smaller loads and stores were unsplittable to prevent chaos from ensuing. With the new pre-splitting logic that does load/store pair splitting I introduced in r225061, we can now very nicely handle arbitrarily splittable loads and stores. In order to fully benefit from these smarts, we need to mark all of the integer loads and stores as splittable. However, we don't actually want to rewrite partitions with all integer loads and stores marked as splittable. This will fail to extract scalar integers from aggregates, which is kind of the point of SROA. =] In order to resolve this, what we really want to do is only do pre-splitting on the alloca slices with integer loads and stores fully splittable. This allows us to uncover all non-integer uses of the alloca that would benefit from a split in an integer load or store (and where introducing the split is safe because it is just memory transfer from a load to a store). Once done, we make all the non-whole-alloca integer loads and stores unsplittable just as they have historically been, repartition and rewrite. The result is that when there are integer loads and stores anywhere within an alloca (such as from a memcpy of a sub-object of a larger object), we can split them up if there are non-integer components to the aggregate hiding beneath. I've added the challenging test cases to demonstrate how this is able to promote to scalars even a case where we have even *partially* overlapping loads and stores. This restores the single-store behavior for small arrays of i8s which is really nice. I've restored both the little endian testing and big endian testing for these exactly as they were prior to r225061. It also forced me to be more aggressive in an alignment test to actually defeat SROA. =] Without the added volatiles there, we actually split up the weird i16 loads and produce nice double allocas with better alignment. This also uncovered a number of bugs where we failed to handle splittable load and store slices which didn't have a begininng offset of zero. Those fixes are included, and without them the existing test cases explode in glorious fireworks. =] I've kept support for leaving whole-alloca integer loads and stores as splittable even for the purpose of rewriting, but I think that's likely no longer needed. With the new pre-splitting, we might be able to remove all the splitting support for loads and stores from the rewriter. Not doing that in this patch to try to isolate any performance regressions that causes in an easy to find and revert chunk. llvm-svn: 225074
2015-01-02 11:55:54 +08:00
// for some other alloca, but it may be a normal load. This may introduce
// redundant loads, but where those can be merged the rest of the optimizer
// should handle the merging, and this uncovers SSA splits which is more
// important. In practice, the original loads will almost always be fully
// split and removed eventually, and the splits will be merged by any
// trivial CSE, including instcombine.
if (LI->hasOneUse()) {
assert(*LI->user_begin() == SI && "Single use isn't this store!");
DeadInsts.insert(LI);
}
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
DeadInsts.insert(SI);
Offsets.S->kill();
}
[SROA] Teach SROA to be more aggressive in splitting now that we have a pre-splitting pass over loads and stores. Historically, splitting could cause enough problems that I hamstrung the entire process with a requirement that splittable integer loads and stores must cover the entire alloca. All smaller loads and stores were unsplittable to prevent chaos from ensuing. With the new pre-splitting logic that does load/store pair splitting I introduced in r225061, we can now very nicely handle arbitrarily splittable loads and stores. In order to fully benefit from these smarts, we need to mark all of the integer loads and stores as splittable. However, we don't actually want to rewrite partitions with all integer loads and stores marked as splittable. This will fail to extract scalar integers from aggregates, which is kind of the point of SROA. =] In order to resolve this, what we really want to do is only do pre-splitting on the alloca slices with integer loads and stores fully splittable. This allows us to uncover all non-integer uses of the alloca that would benefit from a split in an integer load or store (and where introducing the split is safe because it is just memory transfer from a load to a store). Once done, we make all the non-whole-alloca integer loads and stores unsplittable just as they have historically been, repartition and rewrite. The result is that when there are integer loads and stores anywhere within an alloca (such as from a memcpy of a sub-object of a larger object), we can split them up if there are non-integer components to the aggregate hiding beneath. I've added the challenging test cases to demonstrate how this is able to promote to scalars even a case where we have even *partially* overlapping loads and stores. This restores the single-store behavior for small arrays of i8s which is really nice. I've restored both the little endian testing and big endian testing for these exactly as they were prior to r225061. It also forced me to be more aggressive in an alignment test to actually defeat SROA. =] Without the added volatiles there, we actually split up the weird i16 loads and produce nice double allocas with better alignment. This also uncovered a number of bugs where we failed to handle splittable load and store slices which didn't have a begininng offset of zero. Those fixes are included, and without them the existing test cases explode in glorious fireworks. =] I've kept support for leaving whole-alloca integer loads and stores as splittable even for the purpose of rewriting, but I think that's likely no longer needed. With the new pre-splitting, we might be able to remove all the splitting support for loads and stores from the rewriter. Not doing that in this patch to try to isolate any performance regressions that causes in an easy to find and revert chunk. llvm-svn: 225074
2015-01-02 11:55:54 +08:00
// Remove the killed slices that have ben pre-split.
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
AS.erase(std::remove_if(AS.begin(), AS.end(), [](const Slice &S) {
return S.isDead();
}), AS.end());
[SROA] Teach SROA to be more aggressive in splitting now that we have a pre-splitting pass over loads and stores. Historically, splitting could cause enough problems that I hamstrung the entire process with a requirement that splittable integer loads and stores must cover the entire alloca. All smaller loads and stores were unsplittable to prevent chaos from ensuing. With the new pre-splitting logic that does load/store pair splitting I introduced in r225061, we can now very nicely handle arbitrarily splittable loads and stores. In order to fully benefit from these smarts, we need to mark all of the integer loads and stores as splittable. However, we don't actually want to rewrite partitions with all integer loads and stores marked as splittable. This will fail to extract scalar integers from aggregates, which is kind of the point of SROA. =] In order to resolve this, what we really want to do is only do pre-splitting on the alloca slices with integer loads and stores fully splittable. This allows us to uncover all non-integer uses of the alloca that would benefit from a split in an integer load or store (and where introducing the split is safe because it is just memory transfer from a load to a store). Once done, we make all the non-whole-alloca integer loads and stores unsplittable just as they have historically been, repartition and rewrite. The result is that when there are integer loads and stores anywhere within an alloca (such as from a memcpy of a sub-object of a larger object), we can split them up if there are non-integer components to the aggregate hiding beneath. I've added the challenging test cases to demonstrate how this is able to promote to scalars even a case where we have even *partially* overlapping loads and stores. This restores the single-store behavior for small arrays of i8s which is really nice. I've restored both the little endian testing and big endian testing for these exactly as they were prior to r225061. It also forced me to be more aggressive in an alignment test to actually defeat SROA. =] Without the added volatiles there, we actually split up the weird i16 loads and produce nice double allocas with better alignment. This also uncovered a number of bugs where we failed to handle splittable load and store slices which didn't have a begininng offset of zero. Those fixes are included, and without them the existing test cases explode in glorious fireworks. =] I've kept support for leaving whole-alloca integer loads and stores as splittable even for the purpose of rewriting, but I think that's likely no longer needed. With the new pre-splitting, we might be able to remove all the splitting support for loads and stores from the rewriter. Not doing that in this patch to try to isolate any performance regressions that causes in an easy to find and revert chunk. llvm-svn: 225074
2015-01-02 11:55:54 +08:00
// Insert our new slices. This will sort and merge them into the sorted
// sequence.
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
AS.insert(NewSlices);
DEBUG(dbgs() << " Pre-split slices:\n");
#ifndef NDEBUG
for (auto I = AS.begin(), E = AS.end(); I != E; ++I)
DEBUG(AS.print(dbgs(), I, " "));
#endif
// Finally, don't try to promote any allocas that new require re-splitting.
// They have already been added to the worklist above.
PromotableAllocas.erase(
std::remove_if(
PromotableAllocas.begin(), PromotableAllocas.end(),
[&](AllocaInst *AI) { return ResplitPromotableAllocas.count(AI); }),
PromotableAllocas.end());
return true;
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
/// \brief Rewrite an alloca partition's users.
///
/// This routine drives both of the rewriting goals of the SROA pass. It tries
/// to rewrite uses of an alloca partition to be conducive for SSA value
/// promotion. If the partition needs a new, more refined alloca, this will
/// build that new alloca, preserving as much type information as possible, and
/// rewrite the uses of the old alloca to point at the new one and have the
/// appropriate new offsets. It also evaluates how successful the rewrite was
/// at enabling promotion and if it was successful queues the alloca to be
/// promoted.
AllocaInst *SROA::rewritePartition(AllocaInst &AI, AllocaSlices &AS,
[PM] Port SROA to the new pass manager. In some ways this is a very boring port to the new pass manager as there are no interesting analyses or dependencies or other oddities. However, this does introduce the first good example of a transformation pass with non-trivial state porting to the new pass manager. I've tried to carve out patterns here to replicate elsewhere, and would appreciate comments on whether folks like these patterns: - A common need in the new pass manager is to effectively lift the pass class and some of its state into a public header file. Prior to this, LLVM used anonymous namespaces to provide "module private" types and utilities, but that doesn't scale to cases where a public header file is needed and the new pass manager will exacerbate that. The pattern I've adopted here is to use the namespace-cased-name of the core pass (what would be a module if we had them) as a module-private namespace. Then utility and other code can be declared and defined in this namespace. At some point in the future, we could even have (conditionally compiled) code that used modules features when available to do the same basic thing. - I've split the actual pass run method in two in order to expose a private method usable by the old pass manager to wrap the new class with a minimum of duplicated code. I actually looked at a bunch of ways to automate or generate these, but they are all quite terrible IMO. The fundamental need is to extract the set of analyses which need to cross this interface boundary, and that will end up being too unpredictable to effectively encapsulate IMO. This is also a relatively small amount of boiler plate that will live a relatively short time, so I'm not too worried about the fact that it is boiler plate. The rest of the patch is totally boring but results in a massive diff (sorry). It just moves code around and removes or adds qualifiers to reflect the new name and nesting structure. Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12773 llvm-svn: 247501
2015-09-12 17:09:14 +08:00
Partition &P) {
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// Try to compute a friendly type for this partition of the alloca. This
// won't always succeed, in which case we fall back to a legal integer type
// or an i8 array of an appropriate size.
Type *SliceTy = nullptr;
const DataLayout &DL = AI.getModule()->getDataLayout();
if (Type *CommonUseTy = findCommonType(P.begin(), P.end(), P.endOffset()))
if (DL.getTypeAllocSize(CommonUseTy) >= P.size())
SliceTy = CommonUseTy;
if (!SliceTy)
if (Type *TypePartitionTy = getTypePartition(DL, AI.getAllocatedType(),
P.beginOffset(), P.size()))
SliceTy = TypePartitionTy;
if ((!SliceTy || (SliceTy->isArrayTy() &&
SliceTy->getArrayElementType()->isIntegerTy())) &&
DL.isLegalInteger(P.size() * 8))
SliceTy = Type::getIntNTy(*C, P.size() * 8);
if (!SliceTy)
SliceTy = ArrayType::get(Type::getInt8Ty(*C), P.size());
assert(DL.getTypeAllocSize(SliceTy) >= P.size());
bool IsIntegerPromotable = isIntegerWideningViable(P, SliceTy, DL);
VectorType *VecTy =
IsIntegerPromotable ? nullptr : isVectorPromotionViable(P, DL);
if (VecTy)
SliceTy = VecTy;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// Check for the case where we're going to rewrite to a new alloca of the
// exact same type as the original, and with the same access offsets. In that
// case, re-use the existing alloca, but still run through the rewriter to
2013-02-20 06:02:21 +08:00
// perform phi and select speculation.
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
AllocaInst *NewAI;
if (SliceTy == AI.getAllocatedType()) {
assert(P.beginOffset() == 0 &&
"Non-zero begin offset but same alloca type");
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
NewAI = &AI;
// FIXME: We should be able to bail at this point with "nothing changed".
// FIXME: We might want to defer PHI speculation until after here.
// FIXME: return nullptr;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
} else {
unsigned Alignment = AI.getAlignment();
if (!Alignment) {
// The minimum alignment which users can rely on when the explicit
// alignment is omitted or zero is that required by the ABI for this
// type.
Alignment = DL.getABITypeAlignment(AI.getAllocatedType());
}
Alignment = MinAlign(Alignment, P.beginOffset());
// If we will get at least this much alignment from the type alone, leave
// the alloca's alignment unconstrained.
if (Alignment <= DL.getABITypeAlignment(SliceTy))
Alignment = 0;
NewAI = new AllocaInst(
SliceTy, nullptr, Alignment,
AI.getName() + ".sroa." + Twine(P.begin() - AS.begin()), &AI);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
++NumNewAllocas;
}
DEBUG(dbgs() << "Rewriting alloca partition "
<< "[" << P.beginOffset() << "," << P.endOffset()
<< ") to: " << *NewAI << "\n");
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
[SROA] Fix another instability in SROA with respect to the slice ordering. The fundamental problem that we're hitting here is that the use-def chain ordering is *itself* not a stable thing to be relying on in the rewriting for SROA. Further, we use a non-stable sort over the slices to arrange them based on the section of the alloca they're operating on. With a debugging STL implementation (or different implementations in stage2 and stage3) this can cause stage2 != stage3. The specific aspect of this problem fixed in this commit deals with the rewriting and load-speculation around PHIs and Selects. This, like many other aspects of the use-rewriting in SROA, is really part of the "strong SSA-formation" that is doen by SROA where it works very hard to canonicalize loads and stores in *just* the right way to satisfy the needs of mem2reg[1]. When we have a select (or a PHI) with 2 uses of the same alloca, we test that loads downstream of the select are speculatable around it twice. If only one of the operands to the select needs to be rewritten, then if we get lucky we rewrite that one first and the select is immediately speculatable. This can cause the order of operand visitation, and thus the order of slices to be rewritten, to change an alloca from promotable to non-promotable and vice versa. The fix is to defer all of the speculation until *after* the rewrite phase is done. Once we've rewritten everything, we can accurately test for whether speculation will work (once, instead of twice!) and the order ceases to matter. This also happens to simplify the other subtlety of speculation -- we need to *not* speculate anything unless the result of speculating will make the alloca fully promotable by mem2reg. I had a previous attempt at simplifying this, but it was still pretty horrible. There is actually already a *really* nice test case for this in basictest.ll, but on multiple STL implementations and inputs, we just got "lucky". Fortunately, the test case is very small and we can essentially build it in exactly the opposite way to get reasonable coverage in both directions even from normal STL implementations. llvm-svn: 202092
2014-02-25 08:07:09 +08:00
// Track the high watermark on the worklist as it is only relevant for
// promoted allocas. We will reset it to this point if the alloca is not in
// fact scheduled for promotion.
unsigned PPWOldSize = PostPromotionWorklist.size();
unsigned NumUses = 0;
[SROA] Fix another instability in SROA with respect to the slice ordering. The fundamental problem that we're hitting here is that the use-def chain ordering is *itself* not a stable thing to be relying on in the rewriting for SROA. Further, we use a non-stable sort over the slices to arrange them based on the section of the alloca they're operating on. With a debugging STL implementation (or different implementations in stage2 and stage3) this can cause stage2 != stage3. The specific aspect of this problem fixed in this commit deals with the rewriting and load-speculation around PHIs and Selects. This, like many other aspects of the use-rewriting in SROA, is really part of the "strong SSA-formation" that is doen by SROA where it works very hard to canonicalize loads and stores in *just* the right way to satisfy the needs of mem2reg[1]. When we have a select (or a PHI) with 2 uses of the same alloca, we test that loads downstream of the select are speculatable around it twice. If only one of the operands to the select needs to be rewritten, then if we get lucky we rewrite that one first and the select is immediately speculatable. This can cause the order of operand visitation, and thus the order of slices to be rewritten, to change an alloca from promotable to non-promotable and vice versa. The fix is to defer all of the speculation until *after* the rewrite phase is done. Once we've rewritten everything, we can accurately test for whether speculation will work (once, instead of twice!) and the order ceases to matter. This also happens to simplify the other subtlety of speculation -- we need to *not* speculate anything unless the result of speculating will make the alloca fully promotable by mem2reg. I had a previous attempt at simplifying this, but it was still pretty horrible. There is actually already a *really* nice test case for this in basictest.ll, but on multiple STL implementations and inputs, we just got "lucky". Fortunately, the test case is very small and we can essentially build it in exactly the opposite way to get reasonable coverage in both directions even from normal STL implementations. llvm-svn: 202092
2014-02-25 08:07:09 +08:00
SmallPtrSet<PHINode *, 8> PHIUsers;
SmallPtrSet<SelectInst *, 8> SelectUsers;
AllocaSliceRewriter Rewriter(DL, AS, *this, AI, *NewAI, P.beginOffset(),
P.endOffset(), IsIntegerPromotable, VecTy,
PHIUsers, SelectUsers);
bool Promotable = true;
for (Slice *S : P.splitSliceTails()) {
Promotable &= Rewriter.visit(S);
++NumUses;
}
for (Slice &S : P) {
Promotable &= Rewriter.visit(&S);
++NumUses;
}
NumAllocaPartitionUses += NumUses;
MaxUsesPerAllocaPartition =
std::max<unsigned>(NumUses, MaxUsesPerAllocaPartition);
[SROA] Fix another instability in SROA with respect to the slice ordering. The fundamental problem that we're hitting here is that the use-def chain ordering is *itself* not a stable thing to be relying on in the rewriting for SROA. Further, we use a non-stable sort over the slices to arrange them based on the section of the alloca they're operating on. With a debugging STL implementation (or different implementations in stage2 and stage3) this can cause stage2 != stage3. The specific aspect of this problem fixed in this commit deals with the rewriting and load-speculation around PHIs and Selects. This, like many other aspects of the use-rewriting in SROA, is really part of the "strong SSA-formation" that is doen by SROA where it works very hard to canonicalize loads and stores in *just* the right way to satisfy the needs of mem2reg[1]. When we have a select (or a PHI) with 2 uses of the same alloca, we test that loads downstream of the select are speculatable around it twice. If only one of the operands to the select needs to be rewritten, then if we get lucky we rewrite that one first and the select is immediately speculatable. This can cause the order of operand visitation, and thus the order of slices to be rewritten, to change an alloca from promotable to non-promotable and vice versa. The fix is to defer all of the speculation until *after* the rewrite phase is done. Once we've rewritten everything, we can accurately test for whether speculation will work (once, instead of twice!) and the order ceases to matter. This also happens to simplify the other subtlety of speculation -- we need to *not* speculate anything unless the result of speculating will make the alloca fully promotable by mem2reg. I had a previous attempt at simplifying this, but it was still pretty horrible. There is actually already a *really* nice test case for this in basictest.ll, but on multiple STL implementations and inputs, we just got "lucky". Fortunately, the test case is very small and we can essentially build it in exactly the opposite way to get reasonable coverage in both directions even from normal STL implementations. llvm-svn: 202092
2014-02-25 08:07:09 +08:00
// Now that we've processed all the slices in the new partition, check if any
// PHIs or Selects would block promotion.
for (SmallPtrSetImpl<PHINode *>::iterator I = PHIUsers.begin(),
E = PHIUsers.end();
I != E; ++I)
if (!isSafePHIToSpeculate(**I)) {
[SROA] Fix another instability in SROA with respect to the slice ordering. The fundamental problem that we're hitting here is that the use-def chain ordering is *itself* not a stable thing to be relying on in the rewriting for SROA. Further, we use a non-stable sort over the slices to arrange them based on the section of the alloca they're operating on. With a debugging STL implementation (or different implementations in stage2 and stage3) this can cause stage2 != stage3. The specific aspect of this problem fixed in this commit deals with the rewriting and load-speculation around PHIs and Selects. This, like many other aspects of the use-rewriting in SROA, is really part of the "strong SSA-formation" that is doen by SROA where it works very hard to canonicalize loads and stores in *just* the right way to satisfy the needs of mem2reg[1]. When we have a select (or a PHI) with 2 uses of the same alloca, we test that loads downstream of the select are speculatable around it twice. If only one of the operands to the select needs to be rewritten, then if we get lucky we rewrite that one first and the select is immediately speculatable. This can cause the order of operand visitation, and thus the order of slices to be rewritten, to change an alloca from promotable to non-promotable and vice versa. The fix is to defer all of the speculation until *after* the rewrite phase is done. Once we've rewritten everything, we can accurately test for whether speculation will work (once, instead of twice!) and the order ceases to matter. This also happens to simplify the other subtlety of speculation -- we need to *not* speculate anything unless the result of speculating will make the alloca fully promotable by mem2reg. I had a previous attempt at simplifying this, but it was still pretty horrible. There is actually already a *really* nice test case for this in basictest.ll, but on multiple STL implementations and inputs, we just got "lucky". Fortunately, the test case is very small and we can essentially build it in exactly the opposite way to get reasonable coverage in both directions even from normal STL implementations. llvm-svn: 202092
2014-02-25 08:07:09 +08:00
Promotable = false;
PHIUsers.clear();
SelectUsers.clear();
break;
[SROA] Fix another instability in SROA with respect to the slice ordering. The fundamental problem that we're hitting here is that the use-def chain ordering is *itself* not a stable thing to be relying on in the rewriting for SROA. Further, we use a non-stable sort over the slices to arrange them based on the section of the alloca they're operating on. With a debugging STL implementation (or different implementations in stage2 and stage3) this can cause stage2 != stage3. The specific aspect of this problem fixed in this commit deals with the rewriting and load-speculation around PHIs and Selects. This, like many other aspects of the use-rewriting in SROA, is really part of the "strong SSA-formation" that is doen by SROA where it works very hard to canonicalize loads and stores in *just* the right way to satisfy the needs of mem2reg[1]. When we have a select (or a PHI) with 2 uses of the same alloca, we test that loads downstream of the select are speculatable around it twice. If only one of the operands to the select needs to be rewritten, then if we get lucky we rewrite that one first and the select is immediately speculatable. This can cause the order of operand visitation, and thus the order of slices to be rewritten, to change an alloca from promotable to non-promotable and vice versa. The fix is to defer all of the speculation until *after* the rewrite phase is done. Once we've rewritten everything, we can accurately test for whether speculation will work (once, instead of twice!) and the order ceases to matter. This also happens to simplify the other subtlety of speculation -- we need to *not* speculate anything unless the result of speculating will make the alloca fully promotable by mem2reg. I had a previous attempt at simplifying this, but it was still pretty horrible. There is actually already a *really* nice test case for this in basictest.ll, but on multiple STL implementations and inputs, we just got "lucky". Fortunately, the test case is very small and we can essentially build it in exactly the opposite way to get reasonable coverage in both directions even from normal STL implementations. llvm-svn: 202092
2014-02-25 08:07:09 +08:00
}
for (SmallPtrSetImpl<SelectInst *>::iterator I = SelectUsers.begin(),
E = SelectUsers.end();
I != E; ++I)
if (!isSafeSelectToSpeculate(**I)) {
[SROA] Fix another instability in SROA with respect to the slice ordering. The fundamental problem that we're hitting here is that the use-def chain ordering is *itself* not a stable thing to be relying on in the rewriting for SROA. Further, we use a non-stable sort over the slices to arrange them based on the section of the alloca they're operating on. With a debugging STL implementation (or different implementations in stage2 and stage3) this can cause stage2 != stage3. The specific aspect of this problem fixed in this commit deals with the rewriting and load-speculation around PHIs and Selects. This, like many other aspects of the use-rewriting in SROA, is really part of the "strong SSA-formation" that is doen by SROA where it works very hard to canonicalize loads and stores in *just* the right way to satisfy the needs of mem2reg[1]. When we have a select (or a PHI) with 2 uses of the same alloca, we test that loads downstream of the select are speculatable around it twice. If only one of the operands to the select needs to be rewritten, then if we get lucky we rewrite that one first and the select is immediately speculatable. This can cause the order of operand visitation, and thus the order of slices to be rewritten, to change an alloca from promotable to non-promotable and vice versa. The fix is to defer all of the speculation until *after* the rewrite phase is done. Once we've rewritten everything, we can accurately test for whether speculation will work (once, instead of twice!) and the order ceases to matter. This also happens to simplify the other subtlety of speculation -- we need to *not* speculate anything unless the result of speculating will make the alloca fully promotable by mem2reg. I had a previous attempt at simplifying this, but it was still pretty horrible. There is actually already a *really* nice test case for this in basictest.ll, but on multiple STL implementations and inputs, we just got "lucky". Fortunately, the test case is very small and we can essentially build it in exactly the opposite way to get reasonable coverage in both directions even from normal STL implementations. llvm-svn: 202092
2014-02-25 08:07:09 +08:00
Promotable = false;
PHIUsers.clear();
SelectUsers.clear();
break;
[SROA] Fix another instability in SROA with respect to the slice ordering. The fundamental problem that we're hitting here is that the use-def chain ordering is *itself* not a stable thing to be relying on in the rewriting for SROA. Further, we use a non-stable sort over the slices to arrange them based on the section of the alloca they're operating on. With a debugging STL implementation (or different implementations in stage2 and stage3) this can cause stage2 != stage3. The specific aspect of this problem fixed in this commit deals with the rewriting and load-speculation around PHIs and Selects. This, like many other aspects of the use-rewriting in SROA, is really part of the "strong SSA-formation" that is doen by SROA where it works very hard to canonicalize loads and stores in *just* the right way to satisfy the needs of mem2reg[1]. When we have a select (or a PHI) with 2 uses of the same alloca, we test that loads downstream of the select are speculatable around it twice. If only one of the operands to the select needs to be rewritten, then if we get lucky we rewrite that one first and the select is immediately speculatable. This can cause the order of operand visitation, and thus the order of slices to be rewritten, to change an alloca from promotable to non-promotable and vice versa. The fix is to defer all of the speculation until *after* the rewrite phase is done. Once we've rewritten everything, we can accurately test for whether speculation will work (once, instead of twice!) and the order ceases to matter. This also happens to simplify the other subtlety of speculation -- we need to *not* speculate anything unless the result of speculating will make the alloca fully promotable by mem2reg. I had a previous attempt at simplifying this, but it was still pretty horrible. There is actually already a *really* nice test case for this in basictest.ll, but on multiple STL implementations and inputs, we just got "lucky". Fortunately, the test case is very small and we can essentially build it in exactly the opposite way to get reasonable coverage in both directions even from normal STL implementations. llvm-svn: 202092
2014-02-25 08:07:09 +08:00
}
if (Promotable) {
if (PHIUsers.empty() && SelectUsers.empty()) {
// Promote the alloca.
PromotableAllocas.push_back(NewAI);
} else {
// If we have either PHIs or Selects to speculate, add them to those
// worklists and re-queue the new alloca so that we promote in on the
// next iteration.
for (PHINode *PHIUser : PHIUsers)
SpeculatablePHIs.insert(PHIUser);
for (SelectInst *SelectUser : SelectUsers)
SpeculatableSelects.insert(SelectUser);
[SROA] Fix another instability in SROA with respect to the slice ordering. The fundamental problem that we're hitting here is that the use-def chain ordering is *itself* not a stable thing to be relying on in the rewriting for SROA. Further, we use a non-stable sort over the slices to arrange them based on the section of the alloca they're operating on. With a debugging STL implementation (or different implementations in stage2 and stage3) this can cause stage2 != stage3. The specific aspect of this problem fixed in this commit deals with the rewriting and load-speculation around PHIs and Selects. This, like many other aspects of the use-rewriting in SROA, is really part of the "strong SSA-formation" that is doen by SROA where it works very hard to canonicalize loads and stores in *just* the right way to satisfy the needs of mem2reg[1]. When we have a select (or a PHI) with 2 uses of the same alloca, we test that loads downstream of the select are speculatable around it twice. If only one of the operands to the select needs to be rewritten, then if we get lucky we rewrite that one first and the select is immediately speculatable. This can cause the order of operand visitation, and thus the order of slices to be rewritten, to change an alloca from promotable to non-promotable and vice versa. The fix is to defer all of the speculation until *after* the rewrite phase is done. Once we've rewritten everything, we can accurately test for whether speculation will work (once, instead of twice!) and the order ceases to matter. This also happens to simplify the other subtlety of speculation -- we need to *not* speculate anything unless the result of speculating will make the alloca fully promotable by mem2reg. I had a previous attempt at simplifying this, but it was still pretty horrible. There is actually already a *really* nice test case for this in basictest.ll, but on multiple STL implementations and inputs, we just got "lucky". Fortunately, the test case is very small and we can essentially build it in exactly the opposite way to get reasonable coverage in both directions even from normal STL implementations. llvm-svn: 202092
2014-02-25 08:07:09 +08:00
Worklist.insert(NewAI);
}
} else {
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// If we can't promote the alloca, iterate on it to check for new
// refinements exposed by splitting the current alloca. Don't iterate on an
// alloca which didn't actually change and didn't get promoted.
[SROA] Fix another instability in SROA with respect to the slice ordering. The fundamental problem that we're hitting here is that the use-def chain ordering is *itself* not a stable thing to be relying on in the rewriting for SROA. Further, we use a non-stable sort over the slices to arrange them based on the section of the alloca they're operating on. With a debugging STL implementation (or different implementations in stage2 and stage3) this can cause stage2 != stage3. The specific aspect of this problem fixed in this commit deals with the rewriting and load-speculation around PHIs and Selects. This, like many other aspects of the use-rewriting in SROA, is really part of the "strong SSA-formation" that is doen by SROA where it works very hard to canonicalize loads and stores in *just* the right way to satisfy the needs of mem2reg[1]. When we have a select (or a PHI) with 2 uses of the same alloca, we test that loads downstream of the select are speculatable around it twice. If only one of the operands to the select needs to be rewritten, then if we get lucky we rewrite that one first and the select is immediately speculatable. This can cause the order of operand visitation, and thus the order of slices to be rewritten, to change an alloca from promotable to non-promotable and vice versa. The fix is to defer all of the speculation until *after* the rewrite phase is done. Once we've rewritten everything, we can accurately test for whether speculation will work (once, instead of twice!) and the order ceases to matter. This also happens to simplify the other subtlety of speculation -- we need to *not* speculate anything unless the result of speculating will make the alloca fully promotable by mem2reg. I had a previous attempt at simplifying this, but it was still pretty horrible. There is actually already a *really* nice test case for this in basictest.ll, but on multiple STL implementations and inputs, we just got "lucky". Fortunately, the test case is very small and we can essentially build it in exactly the opposite way to get reasonable coverage in both directions even from normal STL implementations. llvm-svn: 202092
2014-02-25 08:07:09 +08:00
if (NewAI != &AI)
Worklist.insert(NewAI);
// Drop any post-promotion work items if promotion didn't happen.
while (PostPromotionWorklist.size() > PPWOldSize)
PostPromotionWorklist.pop_back();
}
return NewAI;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
/// \brief Walks the slices of an alloca and form partitions based on them,
/// rewriting each of their uses.
bool SROA::splitAlloca(AllocaInst &AI, AllocaSlices &AS) {
if (AS.begin() == AS.end())
return false;
unsigned NumPartitions = 0;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
bool Changed = false;
const DataLayout &DL = AI.getModule()->getDataLayout();
[SROA] Teach SROA to be more aggressive in splitting now that we have a pre-splitting pass over loads and stores. Historically, splitting could cause enough problems that I hamstrung the entire process with a requirement that splittable integer loads and stores must cover the entire alloca. All smaller loads and stores were unsplittable to prevent chaos from ensuing. With the new pre-splitting logic that does load/store pair splitting I introduced in r225061, we can now very nicely handle arbitrarily splittable loads and stores. In order to fully benefit from these smarts, we need to mark all of the integer loads and stores as splittable. However, we don't actually want to rewrite partitions with all integer loads and stores marked as splittable. This will fail to extract scalar integers from aggregates, which is kind of the point of SROA. =] In order to resolve this, what we really want to do is only do pre-splitting on the alloca slices with integer loads and stores fully splittable. This allows us to uncover all non-integer uses of the alloca that would benefit from a split in an integer load or store (and where introducing the split is safe because it is just memory transfer from a load to a store). Once done, we make all the non-whole-alloca integer loads and stores unsplittable just as they have historically been, repartition and rewrite. The result is that when there are integer loads and stores anywhere within an alloca (such as from a memcpy of a sub-object of a larger object), we can split them up if there are non-integer components to the aggregate hiding beneath. I've added the challenging test cases to demonstrate how this is able to promote to scalars even a case where we have even *partially* overlapping loads and stores. This restores the single-store behavior for small arrays of i8s which is really nice. I've restored both the little endian testing and big endian testing for these exactly as they were prior to r225061. It also forced me to be more aggressive in an alignment test to actually defeat SROA. =] Without the added volatiles there, we actually split up the weird i16 loads and produce nice double allocas with better alignment. This also uncovered a number of bugs where we failed to handle splittable load and store slices which didn't have a begininng offset of zero. Those fixes are included, and without them the existing test cases explode in glorious fireworks. =] I've kept support for leaving whole-alloca integer loads and stores as splittable even for the purpose of rewriting, but I think that's likely no longer needed. With the new pre-splitting, we might be able to remove all the splitting support for loads and stores from the rewriter. Not doing that in this patch to try to isolate any performance regressions that causes in an easy to find and revert chunk. llvm-svn: 225074
2015-01-02 11:55:54 +08:00
// First try to pre-split loads and stores.
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
Changed |= presplitLoadsAndStores(AI, AS);
[SROA] Teach SROA to be more aggressive in splitting now that we have a pre-splitting pass over loads and stores. Historically, splitting could cause enough problems that I hamstrung the entire process with a requirement that splittable integer loads and stores must cover the entire alloca. All smaller loads and stores were unsplittable to prevent chaos from ensuing. With the new pre-splitting logic that does load/store pair splitting I introduced in r225061, we can now very nicely handle arbitrarily splittable loads and stores. In order to fully benefit from these smarts, we need to mark all of the integer loads and stores as splittable. However, we don't actually want to rewrite partitions with all integer loads and stores marked as splittable. This will fail to extract scalar integers from aggregates, which is kind of the point of SROA. =] In order to resolve this, what we really want to do is only do pre-splitting on the alloca slices with integer loads and stores fully splittable. This allows us to uncover all non-integer uses of the alloca that would benefit from a split in an integer load or store (and where introducing the split is safe because it is just memory transfer from a load to a store). Once done, we make all the non-whole-alloca integer loads and stores unsplittable just as they have historically been, repartition and rewrite. The result is that when there are integer loads and stores anywhere within an alloca (such as from a memcpy of a sub-object of a larger object), we can split them up if there are non-integer components to the aggregate hiding beneath. I've added the challenging test cases to demonstrate how this is able to promote to scalars even a case where we have even *partially* overlapping loads and stores. This restores the single-store behavior for small arrays of i8s which is really nice. I've restored both the little endian testing and big endian testing for these exactly as they were prior to r225061. It also forced me to be more aggressive in an alignment test to actually defeat SROA. =] Without the added volatiles there, we actually split up the weird i16 loads and produce nice double allocas with better alignment. This also uncovered a number of bugs where we failed to handle splittable load and store slices which didn't have a begininng offset of zero. Those fixes are included, and without them the existing test cases explode in glorious fireworks. =] I've kept support for leaving whole-alloca integer loads and stores as splittable even for the purpose of rewriting, but I think that's likely no longer needed. With the new pre-splitting, we might be able to remove all the splitting support for loads and stores from the rewriter. Not doing that in this patch to try to isolate any performance regressions that causes in an easy to find and revert chunk. llvm-svn: 225074
2015-01-02 11:55:54 +08:00
// Now that we have identified any pre-splitting opportunities, mark any
// splittable (non-whole-alloca) loads and stores as unsplittable. If we fail
// to split these during pre-splitting, we want to force them to be
// rewritten into a partition.
bool IsSorted = true;
for (Slice &S : AS) {
if (!S.isSplittable())
continue;
// FIXME: We currently leave whole-alloca splittable loads and stores. This
// used to be the only splittable loads and stores and we need to be
// confident that the above handling of splittable loads and stores is
// completely sufficient before we forcibly disable the remaining handling.
if (S.beginOffset() == 0 &&
S.endOffset() >= DL.getTypeAllocSize(AI.getAllocatedType()))
[SROA] Teach SROA to be more aggressive in splitting now that we have a pre-splitting pass over loads and stores. Historically, splitting could cause enough problems that I hamstrung the entire process with a requirement that splittable integer loads and stores must cover the entire alloca. All smaller loads and stores were unsplittable to prevent chaos from ensuing. With the new pre-splitting logic that does load/store pair splitting I introduced in r225061, we can now very nicely handle arbitrarily splittable loads and stores. In order to fully benefit from these smarts, we need to mark all of the integer loads and stores as splittable. However, we don't actually want to rewrite partitions with all integer loads and stores marked as splittable. This will fail to extract scalar integers from aggregates, which is kind of the point of SROA. =] In order to resolve this, what we really want to do is only do pre-splitting on the alloca slices with integer loads and stores fully splittable. This allows us to uncover all non-integer uses of the alloca that would benefit from a split in an integer load or store (and where introducing the split is safe because it is just memory transfer from a load to a store). Once done, we make all the non-whole-alloca integer loads and stores unsplittable just as they have historically been, repartition and rewrite. The result is that when there are integer loads and stores anywhere within an alloca (such as from a memcpy of a sub-object of a larger object), we can split them up if there are non-integer components to the aggregate hiding beneath. I've added the challenging test cases to demonstrate how this is able to promote to scalars even a case where we have even *partially* overlapping loads and stores. This restores the single-store behavior for small arrays of i8s which is really nice. I've restored both the little endian testing and big endian testing for these exactly as they were prior to r225061. It also forced me to be more aggressive in an alignment test to actually defeat SROA. =] Without the added volatiles there, we actually split up the weird i16 loads and produce nice double allocas with better alignment. This also uncovered a number of bugs where we failed to handle splittable load and store slices which didn't have a begininng offset of zero. Those fixes are included, and without them the existing test cases explode in glorious fireworks. =] I've kept support for leaving whole-alloca integer loads and stores as splittable even for the purpose of rewriting, but I think that's likely no longer needed. With the new pre-splitting, we might be able to remove all the splitting support for loads and stores from the rewriter. Not doing that in this patch to try to isolate any performance regressions that causes in an easy to find and revert chunk. llvm-svn: 225074
2015-01-02 11:55:54 +08:00
continue;
if (isa<LoadInst>(S.getUse()->getUser()) ||
isa<StoreInst>(S.getUse()->getUser())) {
S.makeUnsplittable();
IsSorted = false;
}
}
if (!IsSorted)
std::sort(AS.begin(), AS.end());
/// \brief Describes the allocas introduced by rewritePartition
/// in order to migrate the debug info.
struct Piece {
AllocaInst *Alloca;
uint64_t Offset;
uint64_t Size;
Piece(AllocaInst *AI, uint64_t O, uint64_t S)
: Alloca(AI), Offset(O), Size(S) {}
};
SmallVector<Piece, 4> Pieces;
[SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and stores. When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in the rest of the optimizer: - It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading specific elements that are stored. - We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN. - This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with integer bit math such as floating point operations. - It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle the scalar stores that underly the aggregate. At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math. The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive approaches to this problem. However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses (the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required. With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to help with bisecting any fallout. The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now generates perfect code for this high-level test case using std::complex<float>: #include <complex> void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x += std::complex<float>(a, b); } void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) { x -= std::complex<float>(a, b); } void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b, std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) { std::complex<float> l1 = x; g1(l1, a, b); std::complex<float> l2 = x; g2(l2, a, b); x1 = l1; x2 = l2; } This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were "stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge. So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though, so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more integer loads and stores. llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 19:54:38 +08:00
// Rewrite each partition.
for (auto &P : AS.partitions()) {
if (AllocaInst *NewAI = rewritePartition(AI, AS, P)) {
Changed = true;
if (NewAI != &AI) {
uint64_t SizeOfByte = 8;
uint64_t AllocaSize = DL.getTypeSizeInBits(NewAI->getAllocatedType());
// Don't include any padding.
uint64_t Size = std::min(AllocaSize, P.size() * SizeOfByte);
Pieces.push_back(Piece(NewAI, P.beginOffset() * SizeOfByte, Size));
}
}
++NumPartitions;
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
NumAllocaPartitions += NumPartitions;
MaxPartitionsPerAlloca =
std::max<unsigned>(NumPartitions, MaxPartitionsPerAlloca);
// Migrate debug information from the old alloca to the new alloca(s)
// and the individual partitions.
if (DbgDeclareInst *DbgDecl = FindAllocaDbgDeclare(&AI)) {
auto *Var = DbgDecl->getVariable();
auto *Expr = DbgDecl->getExpression();
DIBuilder DIB(*AI.getModule(), /*AllowUnresolved*/ false);
bool IsSplit = Pieces.size() > 1;
for (auto Piece : Pieces) {
// Create a piece expression describing the new partition or reuse AI's
// expression if there is only one partition.
auto *PieceExpr = Expr;
if (IsSplit || Expr->isBitPiece()) {
// If this alloca is already a scalar replacement of a larger aggregate,
// Piece.Offset describes the offset inside the scalar.
uint64_t Offset = Expr->isBitPiece() ? Expr->getBitPieceOffset() : 0;
uint64_t Start = Offset + Piece.Offset;
uint64_t Size = Piece.Size;
if (Expr->isBitPiece()) {
uint64_t AbsEnd = Expr->getBitPieceOffset() + Expr->getBitPieceSize();
if (Start >= AbsEnd)
// No need to describe a SROAed padding.
continue;
Size = std::min(Size, AbsEnd - Start);
}
PieceExpr = DIB.createBitPieceExpression(Start, Size);
}
// Remove any existing dbg.declare intrinsic describing the same alloca.
if (DbgDeclareInst *OldDDI = FindAllocaDbgDeclare(Piece.Alloca))
OldDDI->eraseFromParent();
DIB.insertDeclare(Piece.Alloca, Var, PieceExpr, DbgDecl->getDebugLoc(),
&AI);
}
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
return Changed;
}
/// \brief Clobber a use with undef, deleting the used value if it becomes dead.
void SROA::clobberUse(Use &U) {
Value *OldV = U;
// Replace the use with an undef value.
U = UndefValue::get(OldV->getType());
// Check for this making an instruction dead. We have to garbage collect
// all the dead instructions to ensure the uses of any alloca end up being
// minimal.
if (Instruction *OldI = dyn_cast<Instruction>(OldV))
if (isInstructionTriviallyDead(OldI)) {
DeadInsts.insert(OldI);
}
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
/// \brief Analyze an alloca for SROA.
///
/// This analyzes the alloca to ensure we can reason about it, builds
/// the slices of the alloca, and then hands it off to be split and
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
/// rewritten as needed.
bool SROA::runOnAlloca(AllocaInst &AI) {
DEBUG(dbgs() << "SROA alloca: " << AI << "\n");
++NumAllocasAnalyzed;
// Special case dead allocas, as they're trivial.
if (AI.use_empty()) {
AI.eraseFromParent();
return true;
}
const DataLayout &DL = AI.getModule()->getDataLayout();
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// Skip alloca forms that this analysis can't handle.
if (AI.isArrayAllocation() || !AI.getAllocatedType()->isSized() ||
DL.getTypeAllocSize(AI.getAllocatedType()) == 0)
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
return false;
bool Changed = false;
// First, split any FCA loads and stores touching this alloca to promote
// better splitting and promotion opportunities.
AggLoadStoreRewriter AggRewriter;
Changed |= AggRewriter.rewrite(AI);
// Build the slices using a recursive instruction-visiting builder.
AllocaSlices AS(DL, AI);
DEBUG(AS.print(dbgs()));
if (AS.isEscaped())
return Changed;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// Delete all the dead users of this alloca before splitting and rewriting it.
for (Instruction *DeadUser : AS.getDeadUsers()) {
// Free up everything used by this instruction.
for (Use &DeadOp : DeadUser->operands())
clobberUse(DeadOp);
// Now replace the uses of this instruction.
DeadUser->replaceAllUsesWith(UndefValue::get(DeadUser->getType()));
// And mark it for deletion.
DeadInsts.insert(DeadUser);
Changed = true;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
for (Use *DeadOp : AS.getDeadOperands()) {
clobberUse(*DeadOp);
Changed = true;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
// No slices to split. Leave the dead alloca for a later pass to clean up.
if (AS.begin() == AS.end())
return Changed;
Changed |= splitAlloca(AI, AS);
DEBUG(dbgs() << " Speculating PHIs\n");
while (!SpeculatablePHIs.empty())
speculatePHINodeLoads(*SpeculatablePHIs.pop_back_val());
DEBUG(dbgs() << " Speculating Selects\n");
while (!SpeculatableSelects.empty())
speculateSelectInstLoads(*SpeculatableSelects.pop_back_val());
return Changed;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
/// \brief Delete the dead instructions accumulated in this run.
///
/// Recursively deletes the dead instructions we've accumulated. This is done
/// at the very end to maximize locality of the recursive delete and to
/// minimize the problems of invalidated instruction pointers as such pointers
/// are used heavily in the intermediate stages of the algorithm.
///
/// We also record the alloca instructions deleted here so that they aren't
/// subsequently handed to mem2reg to promote.
void SROA::deleteDeadInstructions(
SmallPtrSetImpl<AllocaInst *> &DeletedAllocas) {
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
while (!DeadInsts.empty()) {
Instruction *I = DeadInsts.pop_back_val();
DEBUG(dbgs() << "Deleting dead instruction: " << *I << "\n");
I->replaceAllUsesWith(UndefValue::get(I->getType()));
for (Use &Operand : I->operands())
if (Instruction *U = dyn_cast<Instruction>(Operand)) {
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
// Zero out the operand and see if it becomes trivially dead.
Operand = nullptr;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
if (isInstructionTriviallyDead(U))
DeadInsts.insert(U);
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
if (AllocaInst *AI = dyn_cast<AllocaInst>(I)) {
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
DeletedAllocas.insert(AI);
if (DbgDeclareInst *DbgDecl = FindAllocaDbgDeclare(AI))
DbgDecl->eraseFromParent();
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
++NumDeleted;
I->eraseFromParent();
}
}
Port the SSAUpdater-based promotion logic from the old SROA pass to the new one, and add support for running the new pass in that mode and in that slot of the pass manager. With this the new pass can completely replace the old one within the pipeline. The strategy for enabling or disabling the SSAUpdater logic is to do it by making the requirement of the domtree analysis optional. By default, it is required and we get the standard mem2reg approach. This is usually the desired strategy when run in stand-alone situations. Within the CGSCC pass manager, we disable requiring of the domtree analysis and consequentially trigger fallback to the SSAUpdater promotion. In theory this would allow the pass to re-use a domtree if one happened to be available even when run in a mode that doesn't require it. In practice, it lets us have a single pass rather than two which was simpler for me to wrap my head around. There is a hidden flag to force the use of the SSAUpdater code path for the purpose of testing. The primary testing strategy is just to run the existing tests through that path. One notable difference is that it has custom code to handle lifetime markers, and one of the tests has been enhanced to exercise that code. This has survived a bootstrap and the test suite without serious correctness issues, however my run of the test suite produced *very* alarming performance numbers. I don't entirely understand or trust them though, so more investigation is on-going. To aid my understanding of the performance impact of the new SROA now that it runs throughout the optimization pipeline, I'm enabling it by default in this commit, and will disable it again once the LNT bots have picked up one iteration with it. I want to get those bots (which are much more stable) to evaluate the impact of the change before I jump to any conclusions. NOTE: Several Clang tests will fail because they run -O3 and check the result's order of output. They'll go back to passing once I disable it again. llvm-svn: 163965
2012-09-15 19:43:14 +08:00
/// \brief Promote the allocas, using the best available technique.
///
/// This attempts to promote whatever allocas have been identified as viable in
/// the PromotableAllocas list. If that list is empty, there is nothing to do.
/// This function returns whether any promotion occurred.
Port the SSAUpdater-based promotion logic from the old SROA pass to the new one, and add support for running the new pass in that mode and in that slot of the pass manager. With this the new pass can completely replace the old one within the pipeline. The strategy for enabling or disabling the SSAUpdater logic is to do it by making the requirement of the domtree analysis optional. By default, it is required and we get the standard mem2reg approach. This is usually the desired strategy when run in stand-alone situations. Within the CGSCC pass manager, we disable requiring of the domtree analysis and consequentially trigger fallback to the SSAUpdater promotion. In theory this would allow the pass to re-use a domtree if one happened to be available even when run in a mode that doesn't require it. In practice, it lets us have a single pass rather than two which was simpler for me to wrap my head around. There is a hidden flag to force the use of the SSAUpdater code path for the purpose of testing. The primary testing strategy is just to run the existing tests through that path. One notable difference is that it has custom code to handle lifetime markers, and one of the tests has been enhanced to exercise that code. This has survived a bootstrap and the test suite without serious correctness issues, however my run of the test suite produced *very* alarming performance numbers. I don't entirely understand or trust them though, so more investigation is on-going. To aid my understanding of the performance impact of the new SROA now that it runs throughout the optimization pipeline, I'm enabling it by default in this commit, and will disable it again once the LNT bots have picked up one iteration with it. I want to get those bots (which are much more stable) to evaluate the impact of the change before I jump to any conclusions. NOTE: Several Clang tests will fail because they run -O3 and check the result's order of output. They'll go back to passing once I disable it again. llvm-svn: 163965
2012-09-15 19:43:14 +08:00
bool SROA::promoteAllocas(Function &F) {
if (PromotableAllocas.empty())
return false;
NumPromoted += PromotableAllocas.size();
DEBUG(dbgs() << "Promoting allocas with mem2reg...\n");
PromoteMemToReg(PromotableAllocas, *DT, nullptr, AC);
Port the SSAUpdater-based promotion logic from the old SROA pass to the new one, and add support for running the new pass in that mode and in that slot of the pass manager. With this the new pass can completely replace the old one within the pipeline. The strategy for enabling or disabling the SSAUpdater logic is to do it by making the requirement of the domtree analysis optional. By default, it is required and we get the standard mem2reg approach. This is usually the desired strategy when run in stand-alone situations. Within the CGSCC pass manager, we disable requiring of the domtree analysis and consequentially trigger fallback to the SSAUpdater promotion. In theory this would allow the pass to re-use a domtree if one happened to be available even when run in a mode that doesn't require it. In practice, it lets us have a single pass rather than two which was simpler for me to wrap my head around. There is a hidden flag to force the use of the SSAUpdater code path for the purpose of testing. The primary testing strategy is just to run the existing tests through that path. One notable difference is that it has custom code to handle lifetime markers, and one of the tests has been enhanced to exercise that code. This has survived a bootstrap and the test suite without serious correctness issues, however my run of the test suite produced *very* alarming performance numbers. I don't entirely understand or trust them though, so more investigation is on-going. To aid my understanding of the performance impact of the new SROA now that it runs throughout the optimization pipeline, I'm enabling it by default in this commit, and will disable it again once the LNT bots have picked up one iteration with it. I want to get those bots (which are much more stable) to evaluate the impact of the change before I jump to any conclusions. NOTE: Several Clang tests will fail because they run -O3 and check the result's order of output. They'll go back to passing once I disable it again. llvm-svn: 163965
2012-09-15 19:43:14 +08:00
PromotableAllocas.clear();
return true;
}
[PM] Port SROA to the new pass manager. In some ways this is a very boring port to the new pass manager as there are no interesting analyses or dependencies or other oddities. However, this does introduce the first good example of a transformation pass with non-trivial state porting to the new pass manager. I've tried to carve out patterns here to replicate elsewhere, and would appreciate comments on whether folks like these patterns: - A common need in the new pass manager is to effectively lift the pass class and some of its state into a public header file. Prior to this, LLVM used anonymous namespaces to provide "module private" types and utilities, but that doesn't scale to cases where a public header file is needed and the new pass manager will exacerbate that. The pattern I've adopted here is to use the namespace-cased-name of the core pass (what would be a module if we had them) as a module-private namespace. Then utility and other code can be declared and defined in this namespace. At some point in the future, we could even have (conditionally compiled) code that used modules features when available to do the same basic thing. - I've split the actual pass run method in two in order to expose a private method usable by the old pass manager to wrap the new class with a minimum of duplicated code. I actually looked at a bunch of ways to automate or generate these, but they are all quite terrible IMO. The fundamental need is to extract the set of analyses which need to cross this interface boundary, and that will end up being too unpredictable to effectively encapsulate IMO. This is also a relatively small amount of boiler plate that will live a relatively short time, so I'm not too worried about the fact that it is boiler plate. The rest of the patch is totally boring but results in a massive diff (sorry). It just moves code around and removes or adds qualifiers to reflect the new name and nesting structure. Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12773 llvm-svn: 247501
2015-09-12 17:09:14 +08:00
PreservedAnalyses SROA::runImpl(Function &F, DominatorTree &RunDT,
AssumptionCache &RunAC) {
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
DEBUG(dbgs() << "SROA function: " << F.getName() << "\n");
C = &F.getContext();
[PM] Port SROA to the new pass manager. In some ways this is a very boring port to the new pass manager as there are no interesting analyses or dependencies or other oddities. However, this does introduce the first good example of a transformation pass with non-trivial state porting to the new pass manager. I've tried to carve out patterns here to replicate elsewhere, and would appreciate comments on whether folks like these patterns: - A common need in the new pass manager is to effectively lift the pass class and some of its state into a public header file. Prior to this, LLVM used anonymous namespaces to provide "module private" types and utilities, but that doesn't scale to cases where a public header file is needed and the new pass manager will exacerbate that. The pattern I've adopted here is to use the namespace-cased-name of the core pass (what would be a module if we had them) as a module-private namespace. Then utility and other code can be declared and defined in this namespace. At some point in the future, we could even have (conditionally compiled) code that used modules features when available to do the same basic thing. - I've split the actual pass run method in two in order to expose a private method usable by the old pass manager to wrap the new class with a minimum of duplicated code. I actually looked at a bunch of ways to automate or generate these, but they are all quite terrible IMO. The fundamental need is to extract the set of analyses which need to cross this interface boundary, and that will end up being too unpredictable to effectively encapsulate IMO. This is also a relatively small amount of boiler plate that will live a relatively short time, so I'm not too worried about the fact that it is boiler plate. The rest of the patch is totally boring but results in a massive diff (sorry). It just moves code around and removes or adds qualifiers to reflect the new name and nesting structure. Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12773 llvm-svn: 247501
2015-09-12 17:09:14 +08:00
DT = &RunDT;
AC = &RunAC;
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
BasicBlock &EntryBB = F.getEntryBlock();
for (BasicBlock::iterator I = EntryBB.begin(), E = std::prev(EntryBB.end());
I != E; ++I) {
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
if (AllocaInst *AI = dyn_cast<AllocaInst>(I))
Worklist.insert(AI);
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
bool Changed = false;
// A set of deleted alloca instruction pointers which should be removed from
// the list of promotable allocas.
SmallPtrSet<AllocaInst *, 4> DeletedAllocas;
do {
while (!Worklist.empty()) {
Changed |= runOnAlloca(*Worklist.pop_back_val());
deleteDeadInstructions(DeletedAllocas);
// Remove the deleted allocas from various lists so that we don't try to
// continue processing them.
if (!DeletedAllocas.empty()) {
auto IsInSet = [&](AllocaInst *AI) { return DeletedAllocas.count(AI); };
Worklist.remove_if(IsInSet);
PostPromotionWorklist.remove_if(IsInSet);
PromotableAllocas.erase(std::remove_if(PromotableAllocas.begin(),
PromotableAllocas.end(),
IsInSet),
PromotableAllocas.end());
DeletedAllocas.clear();
}
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
Changed |= promoteAllocas(F);
Worklist = PostPromotionWorklist;
PostPromotionWorklist.clear();
} while (!Worklist.empty());
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
[PM] Port SROA to the new pass manager. In some ways this is a very boring port to the new pass manager as there are no interesting analyses or dependencies or other oddities. However, this does introduce the first good example of a transformation pass with non-trivial state porting to the new pass manager. I've tried to carve out patterns here to replicate elsewhere, and would appreciate comments on whether folks like these patterns: - A common need in the new pass manager is to effectively lift the pass class and some of its state into a public header file. Prior to this, LLVM used anonymous namespaces to provide "module private" types and utilities, but that doesn't scale to cases where a public header file is needed and the new pass manager will exacerbate that. The pattern I've adopted here is to use the namespace-cased-name of the core pass (what would be a module if we had them) as a module-private namespace. Then utility and other code can be declared and defined in this namespace. At some point in the future, we could even have (conditionally compiled) code that used modules features when available to do the same basic thing. - I've split the actual pass run method in two in order to expose a private method usable by the old pass manager to wrap the new class with a minimum of duplicated code. I actually looked at a bunch of ways to automate or generate these, but they are all quite terrible IMO. The fundamental need is to extract the set of analyses which need to cross this interface boundary, and that will end up being too unpredictable to effectively encapsulate IMO. This is also a relatively small amount of boiler plate that will live a relatively short time, so I'm not too worried about the fact that it is boiler plate. The rest of the patch is totally boring but results in a massive diff (sorry). It just moves code around and removes or adds qualifiers to reflect the new name and nesting structure. Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12773 llvm-svn: 247501
2015-09-12 17:09:14 +08:00
// FIXME: Even when promoting allocas we should preserve some abstract set of
// CFG-specific analyses.
return Changed ? PreservedAnalyses::none() : PreservedAnalyses::all();
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
[PM] Port SROA to the new pass manager. In some ways this is a very boring port to the new pass manager as there are no interesting analyses or dependencies or other oddities. However, this does introduce the first good example of a transformation pass with non-trivial state porting to the new pass manager. I've tried to carve out patterns here to replicate elsewhere, and would appreciate comments on whether folks like these patterns: - A common need in the new pass manager is to effectively lift the pass class and some of its state into a public header file. Prior to this, LLVM used anonymous namespaces to provide "module private" types and utilities, but that doesn't scale to cases where a public header file is needed and the new pass manager will exacerbate that. The pattern I've adopted here is to use the namespace-cased-name of the core pass (what would be a module if we had them) as a module-private namespace. Then utility and other code can be declared and defined in this namespace. At some point in the future, we could even have (conditionally compiled) code that used modules features when available to do the same basic thing. - I've split the actual pass run method in two in order to expose a private method usable by the old pass manager to wrap the new class with a minimum of duplicated code. I actually looked at a bunch of ways to automate or generate these, but they are all quite terrible IMO. The fundamental need is to extract the set of analyses which need to cross this interface boundary, and that will end up being too unpredictable to effectively encapsulate IMO. This is also a relatively small amount of boiler plate that will live a relatively short time, so I'm not too worried about the fact that it is boiler plate. The rest of the patch is totally boring but results in a massive diff (sorry). It just moves code around and removes or adds qualifiers to reflect the new name and nesting structure. Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12773 llvm-svn: 247501
2015-09-12 17:09:14 +08:00
PreservedAnalyses SROA::run(Function &F, AnalysisManager<Function> *AM) {
return runImpl(F, AM->getResult<DominatorTreeAnalysis>(F),
AM->getResult<AssumptionAnalysis>(F));
Introduce a new SROA implementation. This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass: - It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary thresholds. - It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and promoted. - The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value formation can work together. - The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions and base classes where we tail-pack derived members. - When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large APInts) and impede the backend's lowering. The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it fixes real world problems with the SROA process today. First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement. It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values. The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future SSAUpdater). The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses, building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer. Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition. This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and candidates for promotion. Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for each partition. Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc. After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg. There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is in many ways more complex than the old one. Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable. It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in place, and full testing can be done. Specific areas I'm looking at next: - Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews. - SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager. - Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements. - More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation. Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice. llvm-svn: 163883
2012-09-14 17:22:59 +08:00
}
[PM] Port SROA to the new pass manager. In some ways this is a very boring port to the new pass manager as there are no interesting analyses or dependencies or other oddities. However, this does introduce the first good example of a transformation pass with non-trivial state porting to the new pass manager. I've tried to carve out patterns here to replicate elsewhere, and would appreciate comments on whether folks like these patterns: - A common need in the new pass manager is to effectively lift the pass class and some of its state into a public header file. Prior to this, LLVM used anonymous namespaces to provide "module private" types and utilities, but that doesn't scale to cases where a public header file is needed and the new pass manager will exacerbate that. The pattern I've adopted here is to use the namespace-cased-name of the core pass (what would be a module if we had them) as a module-private namespace. Then utility and other code can be declared and defined in this namespace. At some point in the future, we could even have (conditionally compiled) code that used modules features when available to do the same basic thing. - I've split the actual pass run method in two in order to expose a private method usable by the old pass manager to wrap the new class with a minimum of duplicated code. I actually looked at a bunch of ways to automate or generate these, but they are all quite terrible IMO. The fundamental need is to extract the set of analyses which need to cross this interface boundary, and that will end up being too unpredictable to effectively encapsulate IMO. This is also a relatively small amount of boiler plate that will live a relatively short time, so I'm not too worried about the fact that it is boiler plate. The rest of the patch is totally boring but results in a massive diff (sorry). It just moves code around and removes or adds qualifiers to reflect the new name and nesting structure. Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12773 llvm-svn: 247501
2015-09-12 17:09:14 +08:00
/// A legacy pass for the legacy pass manager that wraps the \c SROA pass.
///
/// This is in the llvm namespace purely to allow it to be a friend of the \c
/// SROA pass.
class llvm::sroa::SROALegacyPass : public FunctionPass {
/// The SROA implementation.
SROA Impl;
public:
SROALegacyPass() : FunctionPass(ID) {
initializeSROALegacyPassPass(*PassRegistry::getPassRegistry());
}
bool runOnFunction(Function &F) override {
if (skipOptnoneFunction(F))
return false;
auto PA = Impl.runImpl(
F, getAnalysis<DominatorTreeWrapperPass>().getDomTree(),
getAnalysis<AssumptionCacheTracker>().getAssumptionCache(F));
return !PA.areAllPreserved();
}
void getAnalysisUsage(AnalysisUsage &AU) const override {
AU.addRequired<AssumptionCacheTracker>();
AU.addRequired<DominatorTreeWrapperPass>();
AU.addPreserved<GlobalsAAWrapperPass>();
AU.setPreservesCFG();
}
const char *getPassName() const override { return "SROA"; }
static char ID;
};
char SROALegacyPass::ID = 0;
FunctionPass *llvm::createSROAPass() { return new SROALegacyPass(); }
INITIALIZE_PASS_BEGIN(SROALegacyPass, "sroa",
"Scalar Replacement Of Aggregates", false, false)
INITIALIZE_PASS_DEPENDENCY(AssumptionCacheTracker)
INITIALIZE_PASS_DEPENDENCY(DominatorTreeWrapperPass)
INITIALIZE_PASS_END(SROALegacyPass, "sroa", "Scalar Replacement Of Aggregates",
false, false)