Commit Graph

78 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Erik Verbruggen 2b98bd2a80 Reassociate x + -0.1234 * y into x - 0.1234 * y
This does not require -ffast-math, and it gives CSE/GVN more options to
eliminate duplicate expressions in, e.g.:

  return ((x + 0.1234 * y) * (x - 0.1234 * y));

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4904

llvm-svn: 216169
2014-08-21 10:45:30 +00:00
Chad Rosier 11ab941644 [Reassociation] Add support for reassociation with unsafe algebra.
Vector instructions are (still) not supported for either integer or floating
point.  Hopefully, that work will be landed shortly.

llvm-svn: 215647
2014-08-14 15:23:01 +00:00
Chad Rosier 5ea14e09e9 [Reassociate] FileCheckize and cleanup a few testcases. No functional change
intended.

llvm-svn: 210685
2014-06-11 18:28:45 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 4968944376 [Reassociate] Similar to "X + -X" -> "0", added code to handle "X + ~X" -> "-1".
Handle "X + ~X" -> "-1" in the function Value *Reassociate::OptimizeAdd(Instruction *I, SmallVectorImpl<ValueEntry> &Ops);
This patch implements:
TODO: We could handle "X + ~X" -> "-1" if we wanted, since "-X = ~X+1".

Patch by Rahul Jain!

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3835

llvm-svn: 209973
2014-05-31 15:01:54 +00:00
Daniel Dunbar 9efbedfd35 [tests] Cleanup initialization of test suffixes.
- Instead of setting the suffixes in a bunch of places, just set one master
   list in the top-level config. We now only modify the suffix list in a few
   suites that have one particular unique suffix (.ml, .mc, .yaml, .td, .py).

 - Aside from removing the need for a bunch of lit.local.cfg files, this enables
   4 tests that were inadvertently being skipped (one in
   Transforms/BranchFolding, a .s file each in DebugInfo/AArch64 and
   CodeGen/PowerPC, and one in CodeGen/SI which is now failing and has been
   XFAILED).

 - This commit also fixes a bunch of config files to use config.root instead of
   older copy-pasted code.

llvm-svn: 188513
2013-08-16 00:37:11 +00:00
Stephen Lin c1c7a1309c Update Transforms tests to use CHECK-LABEL for easier debugging. No functionality change.
This update was done with the following bash script:

  find test/Transforms -name "*.ll" | \
  while read NAME; do
    echo "$NAME"
    if ! grep -q "^; *RUN: *llc" $NAME; then
      TEMP=`mktemp -t temp`
      cp $NAME $TEMP
      sed -n "s/^define [^@]*@\([A-Za-z0-9_]*\)(.*$/\1/p" < $NAME | \
      while read FUNC; do
        sed -i '' "s/;\(.*\)\([A-Za-z0-9_]*\):\( *\)@$FUNC\([( ]*\)\$/;\1\2-LABEL:\3@$FUNC(/g" $TEMP
      done
      mv $TEMP $NAME
    fi
  done

llvm-svn: 186268
2013-07-14 01:42:54 +00:00
Manman Ren 1a5ff287fd TBAA: remove !tbaa from testing cases if not used.
This will make it easier to turn on struct-path aware TBAA since the metadata
format will change.

llvm-svn: 180796
2013-04-30 17:52:57 +00:00
Shuxin Yang 04a4fd43aa Fix a XOR reassociation bug.
When Reassociator optimize "(x | C1)" ^ "(X & C2)", it may swap the two
subexpressions, however, it forgot to swap cached constants (of C1 and C2)
accordingly.

rdar://13739160

llvm-svn: 180676
2013-04-27 18:02:12 +00:00
Shuxin Yang 6662fd0f15 Correct assertion condition
llvm-svn: 178484
2013-04-01 18:13:05 +00:00
Shuxin Yang 7b0c94e207 Implement XOR reassociation. It is based on following rules:
rule 1: (x | c1) ^ c2 => (x & ~c1) ^ (c1^c2),
     only useful when c1=c2
  rule 2: (x & c1) ^ (x & c2) = (x & (c1^c2))
  rule 3: (x | c1) ^ (x | c2) = (x & c3) ^ c3 where c3 = c1 ^ c2
  rule 4: (x | c1) ^ (x & c2) => (x & c3) ^ c1, where c3 = ~c1 ^ c2

 It reduces an application's size (in terms of # of instructions) by 8.9%.
 Reviwed by Pete Cooper. Thanks a lot!

 rdar://13212115  

llvm-svn: 178409
2013-03-30 02:15:01 +00:00
Dmitri Gribenko 56bf2e1830 Tests: rewrite 'opt ... %s' to 'opt ... < %s' so that opt does not emit a ModuleID
This is done to avoid odd test failures, like the one fixed in r171243.

llvm-svn: 171250
2012-12-30 02:33:22 +00:00
Duncan Sands 20bd7fa0f7 Fix PR14060, an infinite loop in reassociate. The problem was that one of the
operands of the expression being written was wrongly thought to be reusable as
an inner node of the expression resulting in it turning up as both an inner node
*and* a leaf, creating a cycle in the def-use graph.  This would have caused the
verifier to blow up if things had gotten that far, however it managed to provoke
an infinite loop first.

llvm-svn: 168291
2012-11-18 19:27:01 +00:00
Duncan Sands ac852c742f Fix a crash observed by Shuxin Yang. The issue here is that LinearizeExprTree,
the utility for extracting a chain of operations from the IR, thought that it
might as well combine any constants it came across (rather than just returning
them along with everything else).  On the other hand, the factorization code
would like to see the individual constants (this is quite reasonable: it is
much easier to pull a factor of 3 out of 2*3 than it is to pull it out of 6;
you may think 6/3 isn't so hard, but due to overflow it's not as easy to undo
multiplications of constants as it may at first appear).  This patch therefore
makes LinearizeExprTree stupider: it now leaves optimizing to the optimization
part of reassociate, and sticks to just analysing the IR.

llvm-svn: 168035
2012-11-15 09:58:38 +00:00
Shuxin Yang c94c3bb5d0 revert r167740
llvm-svn: 167787
2012-11-13 00:08:49 +00:00
Shuxin Yang 1c442f5ec6 This change is to fix rdar://12571717 which is about assertion in Reassociate pass.
The assertion is trigged when the Reassociater tries to transform expression
     ... + 2 * n * 3 + 2 * m + ...
  into:
     ... + 2 * (n*3 + m).

In the process of the transformation, a helper routine folds the constant 2*3 into 6,
confusing optimizer which is trying the to eliminate the common factor 2, and cannot
find 2 any more. 

Review is pending. But I'd like commit first in order to help those who are waiting 
for this fix. 

llvm-svn: 167740
2012-11-12 19:34:11 +00:00
Duncan Sands 5651452076 Stop reassociate from looking through expressions of arbitrary complexity. This
is a temporary measure until my fix for PR13021 is ready.

llvm-svn: 160778
2012-07-26 09:26:40 +00:00
Chandler Carruth a5a29f970e Convert all tests using TCL-style quoting to use shell-style quoting.
This was done through the aid of a terrible Perl creation. I will not
paste any of the horrors here. Suffice to say, it require multiple
staged rounds of replacements, state carried between, and a few
nested-construct-parsing hacks that I'm not proud of. It happens, by
luck, to be able to deal with all the TCL-quoting patterns in evidence
in the LLVM test suite.

If anyone is maintaining large out-of-tree test trees, feel free to poke
me and I'll send you the steps I used to convert things, as well as
answer any painful questions etc. IRC works best for this type of thing
I find.

Once converted, switch the LLVM lit config to use ShTests the same as
Clang. In addition to being able to delete large amounts of Python code
from 'lit', this will also simplify the entire test suite and some of
lit's architecture.

Finally, the test suite runs 33% faster on Linux now. ;]
For my 16-hardware-thread (2x 4-core xeon e5520): 36s -> 24s

llvm-svn: 159525
2012-07-02 12:47:22 +00:00
Duncan Sands 369c6d270b Fix a reassociate crash on sozefx when compiling with dragonegg+gcc-4.7 due to
the optimizers producing a multiply expression with more multiplications than
the original (!).

llvm-svn: 159426
2012-06-29 13:25:06 +00:00
Duncan Sands 514db117bd Some reassociate optimizations create new instructions, which they insert just
before the expression root.  Any existing operators that are changed to use one
of them needs to be moved between it and the expression root, and recursively
for the operators using that one.  When I rewrote RewriteExprTree I accidentally
inverted the logic, resulting in the compacting going down from operators to
operands rather than up from operands to the operators using them, oops.  Fix
this, resolving PR12963.

llvm-svn: 159265
2012-06-27 14:19:00 +00:00
Nick Lewycky bfb07fb562 Remove a dangling reference to a deleted instruction. Fixes PR13185!
llvm-svn: 159096
2012-06-24 01:44:08 +00:00
Duncan Sands 7838603ffc Fix issues (infinite loop and/or crash) with self-referential instructions, for
example degenerate phi nodes and binops that use themselves in unreachable code.
Thanks to Charles Davis for the testcase that uncovered this can of worms.

llvm-svn: 158508
2012-06-15 08:37:50 +00:00
Duncan Sands 409d8ae165 It is possible for several constants which aren't individually absorbing to
combine to the absorbing element.  Thanks to nbjoerg on IRC for pointing this 
out.

llvm-svn: 158399
2012-06-13 12:15:56 +00:00
Duncan Sands 67cd591989 Use std::map rather than SmallMap because SmallMap assumes that the value has
POD type, causing memory corruption when mapping to APInts with bitwidth > 64.
Merge another crash testcase into crash.ll while there.

llvm-svn: 158369
2012-06-12 20:16:51 +00:00
Duncan Sands d7aeefebd6 Now that Reassociate's LinearizeExprTree can look through arbitrary expression
topologies, it is quite possible for a leaf node to have huge multiplicity, for
example: x0 = x*x, x1 = x0*x0, x2 = x1*x1, ... rapidly gives a value which is x
raised to a vast power (the multiplicity, or weight, of x).  This patch fixes
the computation of weights by correctly computing them no matter how big they
are, rather than just overflowing and getting a wrong value.  It turns out that
the weight for a value never needs more bits to represent than the value itself,
so it is enough to represent weights as APInts of the same bitwidth and do the
right overflow-avoiding dance steps when computing weights.  As a side-effect it
reduces the number of multiplies needed in some cases of large powers.  While
there, in view of external uses (eg by the vectorizer) I made LinearizeExprTree
static, pushing the rank computation out into users.  This is progress towards
fixing PR13021.

llvm-svn: 158358
2012-06-12 14:33:56 +00:00
Duncan Sands 9a5cf92250 Revert commit 158073 while waiting for a fix. The issue is that reassociate
can move instructions within the instruction list.  If the instruction just
happens to be the one the basic block iterator is pointing to, and it is
moved to a different basic block, then we get into an infinite loop due to
the iterator running off the end of the basic block (for some reason this
doesn't fire any assertions).  Original commit message:

Grab-bag of reassociate tweaks.  Unify handling of dead instructions and
instructions to reoptimize.  Exploit this to more systematically eliminate
dead instructions (this isn't very useful in practice but is convenient for
analysing some testcase I am working on).  No need for WeakVH any more: use
an AssertingVH instead.

llvm-svn: 158199
2012-06-08 13:37:30 +00:00
Duncan Sands 763da45e9e Grab-bag of reassociate tweaks. Unify handling of dead instructions and
instructions to reoptimize.  Exploit this to more systematically eliminate
dead instructions (this isn't very useful in practice but is convenient for
analysing some testcase I am working on).  No need for WeakVH any more: use
an AssertingVH instead.

llvm-svn: 158073
2012-06-06 14:53:10 +00:00
Duncan Sands 3c05cd3ea8 Since commit 157467, if reassociate isn't actually going to change an expression
then it doesn't alter the instructions composing it, however it would continue
to move the instructions to just before the expression root.  Ensure it doesn't
move them either, so now it really does nothing if there is nothing to do.  That
commit also ensured that nsw etc flags weren't cleared if the expression was not
being changed.  Tweak this a bit so that it doesn't clear flags on the initial
part of a computation either if that part didn't change but later bits did.

llvm-svn: 157518
2012-05-26 16:42:52 +00:00
Duncan Sands bddfb2f96b Make the reassociation pass more powerful so that it can handle expressions
with arbitrary topologies (previously it would give up when hitting a diamond
in the use graph for example).  The testcase from PR12764 is now reduced from
a pile of additions to the optimal 1617*%x0+208.  In doing this I changed the
previous strategy of dropping all uses for expression leaves to one of dropping
all but one use.  This works out more neatly (but required a bunch of tweaks)
and is also safer: some recently fixed bugs during recursive linearization were
because the linearization code thinks it completely owns a node if it has no uses
outside the expression it is linearizing.  But if the node was also in another
expression that had been linearized (and thus all uses of the node from that
expression dropped) then the conclusion that it is completely owned by the
expression currently being linearized is wrong.  Keeping one use from within each
linearized expression avoids this kind of mistake.

llvm-svn: 157467
2012-05-25 12:03:02 +00:00
Duncan Sands 3bbb1d50df Calling ReassociateExpression recursively is extremely dangerous since it will
replace the operands of expressions with only one use with undef and generate
a new expression for the original without using RAUW to update the original.
Thus any copies of the original expression held in a vector may end up
referring to some bogus value - and using a ValueHandle won't help since there
is no RAUW.  There is already a mechanism for getting the effect of recursion
non-recursively: adding the value to be recursed on to RedoInsts.  But it wasn't
being used systematically.  Have various places where recursion had snuck in at
some point use the RedoInsts mechanism instead.  Fixes PR12169.

llvm-svn: 156379
2012-05-08 12:16:05 +00:00
Owen Anderson f4f80e1f39 Teach reassociate to commute FMul's and FAdd's in order to canonicalize the order of their operands across instructions. This allows for greater CSE opportunities.
llvm-svn: 156323
2012-05-07 20:47:23 +00:00
Bill Wendling 274ba89d77 The value held in the vector may be RAUW'ed by some of the canonicalization
methods. Use a weak value handle to keep up with this.
PR12245

llvm-svn: 155984
2012-05-02 09:59:45 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 739ef80fd7 Teach the reassociate pass to fold chains of multiplies with repeated
elements to minimize the number of multiplies required to compute the
final result. This uses a heuristic to attempt to form near-optimal
binary exponentiation-style multiply chains. While there are some cases
it misses, it seems to at least a decent job on a very diverse range of
inputs.

Initial benchmarks show no interesting regressions, and an 8%
improvement on SPASS. Let me know if any other interesting results (in
either direction) crop up!

Credit to Richard Smith for the core algorithm, and helping code the
patch itself.

llvm-svn: 155616
2012-04-26 05:30:30 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 8ffa7c8afd Tidy up this test more:
1) Make the checked assertions a bit more precise. We really want the
   canonical forms coming out of reassociate to be exactly what is
   expected.
2) Remove other passes, and switch the test to actually directly check
   that reassociate makes the important transforms and
   canonicalizations.
3) Fold in a related test case now that we're using FileCheck. Make the
   same tidying changes to it.

llvm-svn: 155311
2012-04-22 10:11:26 +00:00
Chandler Carruth f6f57535ed FileCheck-ize a test, and tidy it up a touch.
llvm-svn: 155310
2012-04-22 10:11:23 +00:00
Eli Bendersky 924f9a671d Replace all instances of dg.exp file with lit.local.cfg, since all tests are run with LIT now and now Dejagnu. dg.exp is no longer needed.
Patch reviewed by Daniel Dunbar. It will be followed by additional cleanup patches.

llvm-svn: 150664
2012-02-16 06:28:33 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer c4189ff0fc Remove empty test.
llvm-svn: 136675
2011-08-02 02:47:45 +00:00
Owen Anderson bddf40e082 Revert r136503 and r136480 in an effort to fix non-determinism in the llvm-gcc buildbots on i386. Devang is looking into the root cause.
llvm-svn: 136674
2011-08-02 02:23:42 +00:00
Devang Patel 3e02522fee Clean up debug info after reassociation.
llvm-svn: 136480
2011-07-29 19:00:35 +00:00
Chris Lattner b1ed91f397 Land the long talked about "type system rewrite" patch. This
patch brings numerous advantages to LLVM.  One way to look at it
is through diffstat:
 109 files changed, 3005 insertions(+), 5906 deletions(-)

Removing almost 3K lines of code is a good thing.  Other advantages
include:

1. Value::getType() is a simple load that can be CSE'd, not a mutating
   union-find operation.
2. Types a uniqued and never move once created, defining away PATypeHolder.
3. Structs can be "named" now, and their name is part of the identity that
   uniques them.  This means that the compiler doesn't merge them structurally
   which makes the IR much less confusing.
4. Now that there is no way to get a cycle in a type graph without a named
   struct type, "upreferences" go away.
5. Type refinement is completely gone, which should make LTO much MUCH faster
   in some common cases with C++ code.
6. Types are now generally immutable, so we can use "Type *" instead 
   "const Type *" everywhere.

Downsides of this patch are that it removes some functions from the C API,
so people using those will have to upgrade to (not yet added) new API.  
"LLVM 3.0" is the right time to do this.

There are still some cleanups pending after this, this patch is large enough
as-is.

llvm-svn: 134829
2011-07-09 17:41:24 +00:00
Dan Gohman 1c6c34834b Fix reassociate to use a worklist instead of recursing when new
reassociation opportunities are exposed. This fixes a bug where
the nested reassociation expects to be the IR to be consistent,
but it isn't, because the outer reassociation has disconnected
some of the operands.  rdar://9167457

llvm-svn: 129324
2011-04-12 00:11:56 +00:00
Dan Gohman 154ed49784 Fix reassociate to postpone certain instruction deletions until
after it has finished all of its reassociations, because its
habit of unlinking operands and holding them in a datastructure
while working means that it's not easy to determine when an
instruction is really dead until after all its regular work is
done. rdar://9096268.

llvm-svn: 127424
2011-03-10 19:51:54 +00:00
Chris Lattner 3eb0af94c4 fix PR9215, preventing -reassociate from clearing nsw/nuw when
it swaps the LHS/RHS of a single binop.

llvm-svn: 125700
2011-02-17 01:29:24 +00:00
Dan Gohman 08d2c98c23 Fix reassociate to clear optional flags, such as nsw.
llvm-svn: 124712
2011-02-02 02:02:34 +00:00
Duncan Sands 69bdb585b2 Fix PR9039, a use-after-free in reassociate. The issue was that the
operand being factorized (and erased) could occur several times in Ops,
resulting in freed memory being used when the next occurrence in Ops was
analyzed.

llvm-svn: 124287
2011-01-26 10:08:38 +00:00
Chris Lattner c6c1523f59 fix a nice subtle reassociate bug which would only occur
in a very specific use pattern embodied in the carefully
reduced testcase.

llvm-svn: 97794
2010-03-05 07:18:54 +00:00
Bob Wilson a10e65c852 Add a test for my change to disable reassociation for i1 types.
llvm-svn: 95465
2010-02-06 01:16:25 +00:00
Chris Lattner 51d64e2a10 filecheckize
llvm-svn: 93775
2010-01-18 21:58:32 +00:00
Chris Lattner ab7087ad66 only factor from expressions whose uses are empty and whose
base is the right expression type.  This fixes PR5981.

llvm-svn: 93045
2010-01-09 06:01:36 +00:00
Chris Lattner f741d72b84 fix an infinite loop in reassociate building emacs.
llvm-svn: 92679
2010-01-05 04:55:35 +00:00
Chris Lattner 0c59ac3f41 When factoring multiply expressions across adds, factor both
positive and negative forms of constants together.  This 
allows us to compile:

int foo(int x, int y) {
    return (x-y) + (x-y) + (x-y);
}

into:

_foo:                                                       ## @foo
	subl	%esi, %edi
	leal	(%rdi,%rdi,2), %eax
	ret

instead of (where the 3 and -3 were not factored):

_foo:
        imull   $-3, 8(%esp), %ecx
        imull   $3, 4(%esp), %eax
        addl    %ecx, %eax
        ret

this started out as:
    movl    12(%ebp), %ecx
    imull   $3, 8(%ebp), %eax
    subl    %ecx, %eax
    subl    %ecx, %eax
    subl    %ecx, %eax
    ret

This comes from PR5359.

llvm-svn: 92381
2010-01-01 01:13:15 +00:00