Commit Graph

7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tobias Grosser fa8079d0dc Update isl to isl-0.18-1047-g4a20ef8
This update:

  - Removes several deprecated functions (e.g., isl_band).
  - Improves the pretty-printing of sets by detecting modulos and "false"
    equalities.
  - Minor improvements to coalescing and increased robustness of the isl
    scheduler.

This update does not yet include isl commit isl-0.18-90-gd00cb45
(isl_pw_*_alloc: add missing check for compatible spaces, Wed Sep 6 12:18:04
2017 +0200), as this additional check is too tight and unfortunately causes
two test case failures in Polly. A patch has been submitted to isl and will be
included in the next isl update for Polly.

llvm-svn: 325557
2018-02-20 07:26:42 +00:00
Siddharth Bhat a1b2086a33 [Invariant Loads] Do not consider invariant loads to have dependences.
We need to relax constraints on invariant loads so that they do not
create fake RAW dependences. So, we do not consider invariant loads as
scalar dependences in a region.

During these changes, it turned out that we do not consider `llvm::Value`
replacements correctly within `PPCGCodeGeneration` and `ISLNodeBuilder`.
The replacements dictated by `ValueMap` were not being followed in all
places. This was fixed in this commit. There is no clean way to decouple
this change because this bug only seems to arise when the relaxed
version of invariant load hoisting was enabled.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35120

llvm-svn: 307907
2017-07-13 12:18:56 +00:00
Tobias Grosser 7cb809983d [tests] Force invariant load hoisting for test cases that need it -- III
llvm-svn: 278673
2016-08-15 15:56:24 +00:00
Johannes Doerfert c3596284c3 Model zext-extend instructions
A zero-extended value can be interpreted as a piecewise defined signed
  value. If the value was non-negative it stays the same, otherwise it
  is the sum of the original value and 2^n where n is the bit-width of
  the original (or operand) type. Examples:
    zext i8 127 to i32 -> { [127] }
    zext i8  -1 to i32 -> { [256 + (-1)] } = { [255] }
    zext i8  %v to i32 -> [v] -> { [v] | v >= 0; [256 + v] | v < 0 }

  However, LLVM/Scalar Evolution uses zero-extend (potentially lead by a
  truncate) to represent some forms of modulo computation. The left-hand side
  of the condition in the code below would result in the SCEV
  "zext i1 <false, +, true>for.body" which is just another description
  of the C expression "i & 1 != 0" or, equivalently, "i % 2 != 0".

    for (i = 0; i < N; i++)
      if (i & 1 != 0 /* == i % 2 */)
        /* do something */

  If we do not make the modulo explicit but only use the mechanism described
  above we will get the very restrictive assumption "N < 3", because for all
  values of N >= 3 the SCEVAddRecExpr operand of the zero-extend would wrap.
  Alternatively, we can make the modulo in the operand explicit in the
  resulting piecewise function and thereby avoid the assumption on N. For the
  example this would result in the following piecewise affine function:
  { [i0] -> [(1)] : 2*floor((-1 + i0)/2) = -1 + i0;
    [i0] -> [(0)] : 2*floor((i0)/2) = i0 }
  To this end we can first determine if the (immediate) operand of the
  zero-extend can wrap and, in case it might, we will use explicit modulo
  semantic to compute the result instead of emitting non-wrapping assumptions.

  Note that operands with large bit-widths are less likely to be negative
  because it would result in a very large access offset or loop bound after the
  zero-extend. To this end one can optimistically assume the operand to be
  positive and avoid the piecewise definition if the bit-width is bigger than
  some threshold (here MaxZextSmallBitWidth).

  We choose to go with a hybrid solution of all modeling techniques described
  above. For small bit-widths (up to MaxZextSmallBitWidth) we will model the
  wrapping explicitly and use a piecewise defined function. However, if the
  bit-width is bigger than MaxZextSmallBitWidth we will employ overflow
  assumptions and assume the "former negative" piece will not exist.

llvm-svn: 267408
2016-04-25 14:01:36 +00:00
Johannes Doerfert 642594ae87 Exploit graph properties during domain generation
As a CFG is often structured we can simplify the steps performed during
  domain generation. When we push domain information we can utilize the
  information from a block A to build the domain of a block B, if A dominates B
  and there is no loop backede on a path from A to B. When we pull domain
  information we can use information from a block A to build the domain of a
  block B if B post-dominates A. This patch implements both ideas and thereby
  simplifies domains that were not simplified by isl. For the FINAL basic block
  in test/ScopInfo/complex-successor-structure-3.ll we used to build a universe
  set with 81 basic sets. Now it actually is represented as universe set.

  While the initial idea to utilize the graph structure depended on the
  dominator and post-dominator tree we can use the available region
  information as a coarse grained replacement. To this end we push the
  region entry domain to the region exit and pull it from the region
  entry for the region exit if applicable.

  With this patch we now successfully compile
    External/SPEC/CINT2006/400_perlbench/400_perlbench
  and
    SingleSource/Benchmarks/Adobe-C++/loop_unroll.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18450

llvm-svn: 265285
2016-04-04 07:57:39 +00:00
Tobias Grosser 6deba4ea03 Revert 264782 and 264789
These caused LNT failures due to new assertions when running with
-polly-position=before-vectorizer -polly-process-unprofitable for:

FAIL: clamscan.compile_time
FAIL: cjpeg.compile_time
FAIL: consumer-jpeg.compile_time
FAIL: shapes.compile_time
FAIL: clamscan.execution_time
FAIL: cjpeg.execution_time
FAIL: consumer-jpeg.execution_time
FAIL: shapes.execution_time

The failures have been introduced by r264782, but r264789 had to be reverted
as it depended on the earlier patch.

llvm-svn: 264885
2016-03-30 18:18:31 +00:00
Johannes Doerfert a144fb148b Exploit graph properties during domain generation
As a CFG is often structured we can simplify the steps performed
  during domain generation. When we push domain information we can
  utilize the information from a block A to build the domain of a
  block B, if A dominates B. When we pull domain information we can
  use information from a block A to build the domain of a block B
  if B post-dominates A. This patch implements both ideas and thereby
  simplifies domains that were not simplified by isl. For the FINAL
  basic block in
    test/ScopInfo/complex-successor-structure-3.ll .
  we used to build a universe set with 81 basic sets. Now it actually is
  represented as universe set.

  While the initial idea to utilize the graph structure depended on the
  dominator and post-dominator tree we can use the available region
  information as a coarse grained replacement. To this end we push the
  region entry domain to the region exit and pull it from the region
  entry for the region exit.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18450

llvm-svn: 264789
2016-03-29 21:31:05 +00:00