This is part of an effort to reduce the differences between the custom C++ bindings used right now by polly in `lib/External/isl/include/isl/isl-noxceptions.h` and the official isl C++ interface.
Changes made:
- Removing method `to_str()` from all the classes in the isl C++ bindings.
- Overload method `stringFromIslObj()` so it accepts isl C++ objects.
- To keep backward compatibility `stringFromIslObj()` now accepts a value that is returned if the isl C object is `null` or doesn't have a string representation (by default it's an empty string). In some cases it's better to have the string "null" instead of an empty string.
- isl-noexceptions.h has been generated by this d33ec3a3bb
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104211
This is part of an effort to reduce the differences between the custom C++ bindings used right now by polly in `lib/External/isl/include/isl/isl-noxceptions.h` and the official isl C++ interface.
Changes made:
- Removing explicit operator bool() from all the classes in the isl C++ bindings.
- Replace each call to operator bool() to method `is_null()`.
- isl-noexceptions.h has been generated by this 27396daac5
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103976
[Polly][Isl] Removing nullptr constructor from C++ bindings. NFC.
This is part of an effort to reduce the differences between the custom C++ bindings used right now by polly in `lib/External/isl/include/isl/isl-noxceptions.h` and the official isl C++ interface.
Changes made:
- Removed `std::nullptr_t` constructor from all the classes in the isl C++ bindings.
- `isl-noexceptions.h` has been generated by this a7e00bea38
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103751
[Polly][Isl] Removing nullptr constructor from C++ bindings. NFC.
This is part of an effort to reduce the differences between the custom C++ bindings used right now by polly in `lib/External/isl/include/isl/isl-noxceptions.h` and the official isl C++ interface.
Changes made:
- Removed `std::nullptr_t` constructor from all the classes in the isl C++ bindings.
- `isl-noexceptions.h` has been generated by this a7e00bea38
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103751
Regenerate the C++ wrapper header from the current isl version's
headers.
The most notable change is that some dimension sizes are represented by
an isl_size (instead of unsigned), which is a signed int. Additionally,
some function may return -1 in case of an error which already had been
fixed in the past. The C++ may no return -1 instead of UINT_MAX which
caused the problems.
Some types in Polly had been changed from unsigned to isl_size
(that were not already auto) and some loops/comparision had to be
changed to avoid unsigned/signed comparison warnings.
MemoryAccess::setNewAccessRelation() in assert-builds checks whether the
access relation for a READ has a memory location for every instance of
the domain. Otherwise, we would not have value to load from. That check
already considered that instances outside the Scop's context do not
matter since they are never executed (or would be undefined behavior).
In this patch also take instances of the InvalidContext into account,
as these can also be assumed to never occur. InvalidContext was
introduced to avoid the computational complexity of subtracting
restrictions from the AssumedContext. However, this additional check in
setNewAccessRelation is only done in assert-builds.
The assertion case with an InvalidContext may occur with DeLICM on a
conditionally infinite loops, as it is the case in the following code:
for (int i = 0; i < n; i+=b)
vreg = ...;
*Dest = vreg;
The loop is infinite when b=0, and [b] -> { : b = 0 } is part of the
InvalidContext. When DeLICM tries to map the memory for %vreg to *Dest,
there is no store instance that uses the value of vreg when b = 0, hence
no location to map it to. However, the case is irrelevant since Polly's
runtime condition check ensures that this is never case.
Fixes llvm.org/PR48445
After the update to ISL to isl-0.22.1-87-gfee05a13 and its change of
isl_*_dim returning -1 instead of 0, the -1 got wrapped-around to
UINT_MAX because Polly often uses 'unsigned' type to represent
dimensions, as ISL did before this patch. This may happen in normal
executions after an out-of-quota.
Fix by catching the error-case earlier.
The idiom
for (auto i = n - n; i < n; i += 1)
was intended to automatically derive the type of i from n
(signed/unsigned int) and avoid the 'mixed signed/unsigned comparison'
warning. However, almost-always-auto was never used in the LLVM coding
style (although we used it in Polly for some time) and I did never
intended to use this idiom upstream.
PVS Studio may warns about this idiom as 'warning: both sides of
operator are equivalent [misc-redundant-expression]'.
Remove the use of auto and directly use unsigned.
Also see http://llvm.org/PR44768
PHI nodes (reads) could point to multiple instances of predecessor
blocks (PHI writes) when in an invalid context. Fix by removing PHI
instances that are in an invalid or ouside assumed context.
This fixes llvm.org/PR41656.
llvm-svn: 360454
This removes unused includes (and forward declarations) as
suggested by include-what-you-use. If a transitive include of a removed
include is required to compile a file, I added the required header (or
forward declaration if suggested by include-what-you-use).
This should reduce compilation time and reduce the number of iterative
recompilations when a header was changed.
llvm-svn: 357209
to reflect the new license.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351636
The main difference in this change is that isl_stat is now always
checked by default. As we elminiated most used of isl_stat, thanks to
Philip Pfaffe's implementation of foreach, only a small set of changes
is needed.
This change does not include the following recent changes to isl's C++
bindings:
- stricter error handling for isl_bool
- dropping of the isl::namespace qualifiers
The former requires a larger patch in Polly and consequently should go
through a patch-review. The latter will be applied in the next commit to
keep this commit free from noise.
We also still apply a couple of other changes on top of the official isl
bindings. This delta is expected to shrink over time.
llvm-svn: 338504
An assertion was not prepared to be passed a nullptr because the
out-of-quota limit was exceeded. Bail-out before the assertion
since the assertion does not apply on out-of-quote.
This fixes llvm.org/PR37477.
llvm-svn: 332488
Summary:
r327219 added wrappers to std::sort which randomly shuffle the container before sorting.
This will help in uncovering non-determinism caused due to undefined sorting
order of objects having the same key.
To make use of that infrastructure we need to invoke llvm::sort instead of std::sort.
Reviewers: grosser, efriedma, jdoerfert, bollu, sebpop
Reviewed By: sebpop
Subscribers: sebpop, mehdi_amini, llvm-commits, pollydev
Tags: #polly
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44361
llvm-svn: 327361
As part of this cleanup a couple of unnecessary isl::manage(obj.copy()) pattern
are eliminated as well.
We checked for all potential cleanups by scanning for:
"grep -R isl::manage\( lib/ | grep copy"
llvm-svn: 325558
Print same or similar structure elements together. Previously, the
value could take more importance that the space structure if visited
first in the space nest tree.
Before:
{
Left[0] -> Right[i]: i >= 0;
Left[1] -> AnotherRight[i];
Left[2] -> Right[-1]
}
After:
{
Left[0] -> Right[i]: i >= 0;
Left[2] -> Right[-1];
Left[1] -> AnotherRight[i]
}
llvm-svn: 322581
These functions print a multi-line and sorted representation of unions
of polyhedra. Each polyhedron (basic_{ast/map}) has its own line.
First sort key is the polyhedron's hierachical space structure.
Secondary sort key is the lower bound of the polyhedron, which should
ensure that the polyhedral are printed in approximately ascending order.
Example output of dumpPw():
[p_0, p_1, p_2] -> {
Stmt0[0] -> [0, 0];
Stmt0[i0] -> [i0, 0] : 0 < i0 <= 5 - p_2;
Stmt1[0] -> [0, 2] : p_1 = 1 and p_0 = -1;
Stmt2[0] -> [0, 1] : p_1 >= 3 + p_0;
Stmt3[0] -> [0, 3];
}
In contrast dumpExpanded() prints each point in the sets, unless there
is an unbounded dimension that cannot be expandend.
This is useful for reduced test cases where the loop counts are set to
some constant to understand a bug.
Example output of dumpExpanded(
{ [MemRef_A[i0] -> [i1]] : (exists (e0 = floor((1 + i1)/3): i0 = 1 and
3e0 <= i1 and 3e0 >= -1 + i1 and i1 >= 15 and i1 <= 25)) or (exists (e0
= floor((i1)/3): i0 = 0 and 3e0 < i1 and 3e0 >= -2 + i1 and i1 > 0 and
i1 <= 11)) }):
{
[MemRef_A[0] ->[1]];
[MemRef_A[0] ->[2]];
[MemRef_A[0] ->[4]];
[MemRef_A[0] ->[5]];
[MemRef_A[0] ->[7]];
[MemRef_A[0] ->[8]];
[MemRef_A[0] ->[10]];
[MemRef_A[0] ->[11]];
[MemRef_A[1] ->[15]];
[MemRef_A[1] ->[16]];
[MemRef_A[1] ->[18]];
[MemRef_A[1] ->[19]];
[MemRef_A[1] ->[21]];
[MemRef_A[1] ->[22]];
[MemRef_A[1] ->[24]];
[MemRef_A[1] ->[25]]
}
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38349
llvm-svn: 314525
ZoneAlgo used to bail out for the complete SCoP if it encountered
something violating its assumption. This meant the neither OpTree can
forward any load nor DeLICM do anything in such cases, even if their
transformations are unrelated to the violations.
This patch adds a list of compatible elements (currently with the
granularity of entire arrays) that can be used for analysis. OpTree
and DeLICM can then check whether their transformations only concern
compatible elements, and skip non-compatible ones.
This will be useful for e.g. Polybench's benchmarks covariance,
correlation, bicg, doitgen, durbin, gramschmidt, adi that have
assumption violation, but which are not necessarily relevant
for all transformations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37219
llvm-svn: 311929
The implementation of computeArrayUnused did not consider writes without
reads before, except for the first write in the SCoP. This caused it to
'forget' writes directly following another write.
This patch re-adds the entire reaching defintion of a write that has not
been covered before by a read.
This fixes Polybench 4.2 2mm where only one of the matrix-multiplication
was detected.
llvm-svn: 311403
distributeDomain() and filterKnownValInst() are used in a scop
of ForwardOpTree that limits the number of isl operations.
Therefore some isl functions may return null after any operation.
Remove assertion that assume non-null results and handle
isl_*_foreach returning isl::stat::error.
I hope this fixes the crash of the asop buildbot at ihevc_recon.c.
llvm-svn: 310461
This is an addition to the -polly-optree pass that reuses the array
content analysis from DeLICM to find array elements that contain the
same value as the value loaded when the target statement instance
is executed.
The analysis is now enabled by default.
The known content analysis could also be used to rematerialize any
llvm::Value that was written to some array element, but currently
only loads are forwarded.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36380
llvm-svn: 310279
This commit switches Polly over to the isl::obj::foreach_* implementation, which
is part of the new isl bindings and follows the foreach pattern established in
Polly by Michael Kruse.
The original isl C function:
isl_stat isl_union_set_foreach_set(__isl_keep isl_union_set *uset,
isl_stat (*fn)(__isl_take isl_set *set, void *user), void *user);
which required the user to define a static callback function to which all
interesting parameters are passed via a 'void *' user-pointer, is on the
C++ side available as a function that takes a std::function<>, which can
carry any additional arguments without the need for a user pointer:
stat UnionSet::foreach_set(const std::function<stat(set)> &fn) const;
The following code illustrates the use of the new C++ interface:
auto Lambda = [=, &Result](isl::set Set) -> isl::stat {
auto Shifted = shiftDimension(Set, Pos, Amount);
Result = Result.add(Shifted);
return isl::stat::ok;
}
UnionSet.foreach_set(Lambda);
Polly had some specialized foreach functions which did not require the lambdas
to return a status flag. We remove these functions in this commit to move Polly
completely over to the new isl interface. We may in the future discuss if
functors without return values can be supported easily.
Another extension proposed by Michael Kruse is the use of C++ iterators to allow
the use of normal for loops to iterate over these sets. Such an extension would
allow us to further simplify the code.
Reviewed-by: Michael Kruse <llvm@meinersbur.de>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30620
llvm-svn: 300323
Add shiftDim and convertZoneToTimepoints overloads for isl maps.
Add distributeDomain, liftDomains and applyDomainRange functions.
These are going to be used in https://reviews.llvm.org/D31247
(Add known array contents to Knowledge)
llvm-svn: 298543
Over the last couple of months several authors of independent isl C++ bindings
worked together to jointly design an official set of isl C++ bindings which
combines their experience in developing isl C++ bindings. The new bindings have
been designed around a value pointer style interface and remove the need for
explicit pointer managenent and instead use C++ language features to manage isl
objects.
This commit introduces the smart-pointer part of the isl C++ bindings and
replaces the current IslPtr<T> classes, which served the very same purpose, but
had to be manually maintained. Instead, we now rely on automatically generated
classes for each isl object, which provide value_ptr semantics.
An isl object has the following smart pointer interface:
inline set manage(__isl_take isl_set *ptr);
class set {
friend inline set manage(__isl_take isl_set *ptr);
isl_set *ptr = nullptr;
inline explicit set(__isl_take isl_set *ptr);
public:
inline set();
inline set(const set &obj);
inline set &operator=(set obj);
inline ~set();
inline __isl_give isl_set *copy() const &;
inline __isl_give isl_set *copy() && = delete;
inline __isl_keep isl_set *get() const;
inline __isl_give isl_set *release();
inline bool is_null() const;
}
The interface and behavior of the new value pointer style classes is inspired
by http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2012/n3339.pdf, which
proposes a std::value_ptr, a smart pointer that applies value semantics to its
pointee.
We currently only provide a limited set of public constructors and instead
require provide a global overloaded type constructor method "isl::obj
isl::manage(isl_obj *)", which allows to convert an isl_set* to an isl::set by
calling 'S = isl::manage(s)'. This pattern models the make_unique() constructor
for unique pointers.
The next two functions isl::obj::get() and isl::obj::release() are taken
directly from the std::value_ptr proposal:
S.get() extracts the raw pointer of the object managed by S.
S.release() extracts the raw pointer of the object managed by S and sets the
object in S to null.
We additionally add std::obj::copy(). S.copy() returns a raw pointer refering
to a copy of S, which is a shortcut for "isl::obj(oldobj).release()", a
functionality commonly needed when interacting directly with the isl C
interface where all methods marked with __isl_take require consumable raw
pointers.
S.is_null() checks if S manages a pointer or if the managed object is currently
null. We add this function to provide a more explicit way to check if the
pointer is empty compared to a direct conversion to bool.
This commit also introduces a couple of polly-specific extensions that cover
features currently not handled by the official isl C++ bindings draft, but
which have been provided by IslPtr<T> and are consequently added to avoid code
churn. These extensions include:
- operator bool() : Conversion from objects to bool
- construction from nullptr_t
- get_ctx() method
- take/keep/give methods, which match the currently used naming
convention of IslPtr<T> in Polly. They just forward to
(release/get/manage).
- raw_ostream printers
We expect that these extensions are over time either removed or upstreamed to
the official isl bindings.
We also export a couple of classes that have not yet been exported in isl (e.g.,
isl::space)
As part of the code review, the following two questions were asked:
- Why do we not use a standard smart pointer?
std::value_ptr was a proposal that has not been accepted. It is consequently
not available in the standard library. Even if it would be available, we want
to expand this interface with a complete method interface that is conveniently
available from each managed pointer. The most direct way to achieve this is to
generate a specialiced value style pointer class for each isl object type and
add any additional methods to this class. The relevant changes follow in
subsequent commits.
- Why do we not use templates or macros to avoid code duplication?
It is certainly possible to use templates or macros, but as this code is
auto-generated there is no need to make writing this code more efficient. Also,
most of these classes will be specialized with individual member functions in
subsequent commits, such that there will be little code reuse to exploit. Hence,
we decided to do so at the moment.
These bindings are not yet officially part of isl, but the draft is already very
stable. The smart pointer interface itself did not change since serveral months.
Adding this code to Polly is against our normal policy of only importing
official isl code. In this case however, we make an exception to showcase a
non-trivial use case of these bindings which should increase confidence in these
bindings and will help upstreaming them to isl.
Tags: #polly
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30325
llvm-svn: 297452
NonowningIslPtr<isl_X> was used as types of function parameters when the
function does not consume the isl object, i.e. an __isl_keep parameter.
The alternatives are:
1. IslPtr<isl_X>
This has additional calls to isl_X_copy and isl_X_free to
increase/decrease the reference counter even though not needed. The
caller already owns a reference to the isl object.
2. const IslPtr<isl_X>&
This does not change the reference counter, but requires an
additional load to get the pointer to the isl object (instead of just
passing the pointer itself).
Moreover, the compiler cannot rely on the constness of the pointer
and has to reload the pointer every time it writes to memory (unless
alias analysis such as TBAA says it is not possible).
The isl C++ bindings currently in development do not have an equivalent
to NonowningIslPtr and adding one would make the binding more
complicated and its advantage in performance is small. In order to
simplify the transition to these C++ bindings, remove NonowningIslPtr.
Change every former use of it to alternative 2 mentioned aboce
(const IslPtr<isl_X>&).
llvm-svn: 295998
This function has been extracted from the upcoming DeLICM patch
(https://reviews.llvm.org/D24716).
In contrast to computeReachingWrite and computeArrayUnused,
convertZoneToTimepoints implies a format for zones (ranges between timepoints).
Zones at the moment are unique to DeLICM, but convertZoneToTimepoints makes most
sense in conjunction with the previous two functions.
llvm-svn: 294094
Add some generally useful isl tools into a their own new ISLTools.cpp.
These are the helpers were extracted from and will be use by the DeLICM
algorithm (https://reviews.llvm.org/D24716).
Suggested-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
llvm-svn: 293340