Commit Graph

33 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Michael Kruse a43ba2d84f [ScopBuilder] Make -polly-stmt-granularity=scalar-indep the default.
Splitting basic blocks into multiple statements if there are now
additional scalar dependencies gives more freedom to the scheduler, but
more statements also means higher compile-time complexity. Switch to
finer statement granularity, the additional compile time should be
limited by the number of operations quota.

The regression tests are written for the -polly-stmt-granularity=bb
setting, therefore we add that flag to those tests that break with the
new default. Some of the tests only fail because the statements are
named differently due to a basic block resulting in multiple statements,
but which are removed during simplification of statements without
side-effects. Previous commits tried to reduce this effect, but it is
not completely avoidable.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42151

llvm-svn: 324169
2018-02-03 06:59:47 +00:00
Tobias Grosser 5e41458985 Bump isl to isl-0.18-768-g033b61ae
Summary: This is a general maintenance update

Reviewers: grosser

Subscribers: srhines, fedor.sergeev, pollydev, llvm-commits

Contributed-by: Maximilian Falkenstein <falkensm@student.ethz.ch>

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34903

llvm-svn: 307090
2017-07-04 15:54:11 +00:00
Tobias Grosser 7aa22859b6 Update some tests to changes in isl's internal representation
This was forgotten as part of r304069.

llvm-svn: 304070
2017-05-27 11:33:05 +00:00
Tobias Grosser 8133128c17 [ScopInfo] Do not add array name into memory reference ids
Before this change a memory reference identifier had the form:

  <STMT>_<ACCESSTYPE><ID>_<MEMREF>, e.g., Stmt_bb9_Write0_MemRef_tmp11

After this change, we use the format:

  <STMT>_<ACCESSTYPE><ID>, e.g., Stmt_bb9_Write0

The name of the array that is accessed through a memory reference is not
necessary to uniquely identify a memory reference, but was only added to
provide additional information for debugging. We drop this information now
for the following two reasons:

  1) This shortens the names and consequently improves readability
  2) This removes a second location where we decide on the name of a scop array,
     leaving us only with the location where the actual scop array is created.

Having after 2) only a single location to name scop arrays will allow us to
change the naming convention of scop arrays more easily, which we will do
in a future commit to reduce compilation time.

llvm-svn: 302004
2017-05-03 07:57:35 +00:00
Siddharth Bhat 729377f063 [Polly] [DependenceInfo] change WAR generation, Read will not block Read
Earlier, the call to buildFlow was:
    WAR = buildFlow(Write, Read, MustWrite, Schedule).

This meant that Read could block another Read, since must-sources can
block each other.

Fixed the call to buildFlow to correctly compute Read. The resulting
code needs to do some ISL juggling to get the output we want.

Bug report: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32623

Reviewers: Meinersbur

Tags: #polly

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32011

llvm-svn: 301266
2017-04-24 22:23:12 +00:00
Siddharth Bhat bcbfdade41 [Polly] [DependenceInfo] change WAR, WAW generation to correct semantics
= Change of WAR, WAW generation: =

- `buildFlow(Sink, MustSource, MaySource, Sink)` treates any flow of the form
    `sink <- may source <- must source` as a *may* dependence.

- we used to call:
```lang=cpp, name=old-flow-call.cpp
Flow = buildFlow(MustWrite, MustWrite, Read, Schedule);
WAW = isl_union_flow_get_must_dependence(Flow);
WAR = isl_union_flow_get_may_dependence(Flow);
```

- This caused some WAW dependences to be treated as WAR dependences.
- Incorrect semantics.

- Now, we call WAR and WAW correctly.

== Correct WAW: ==
```lang=cpp, name=new-waw-call.cpp
   Flow = buildFlow(Write, MustWrite, MayWrite, Schedule);
   WAW = isl_union_flow_get_may_dependence(Flow);
   isl_union_flow_free(Flow);
```

== Correct WAR: ==
```lang=cpp, name=new-war-call.cpp
    Flow = buildFlow(Write, Read, MustaWrite, Schedule);
    WAR = isl_union_flow_get_must_dependence(Flow);
    isl_union_flow_free(Flow);
```

- We want the "shortest" WAR possible (exact dependences).
- We mark all the *must-writes* as may-source, reads as must-souce.
- Then, we ask for *must* dependence.
- This removes all the reads that flow through a *must-write*
  before reaching a sink.
- Note that we only block ealier writes with *must-writes*. This is
  intuitively correct, as we do not want may-writes to block
  must-writes.
- Leaves us with direct (R -> W).

- This affects reduction generation since RED is built using WAW and WAR.

= New StrictWAW for Reductions: =

- We used to call:
```lang=cpp,name=old-waw-war-call.cpp
      Flow = buildFlow(MustWrite, MustWrite, Read, Schedule);
      WAW = isl_union_flow_get_must_dependence(Flow);
      WAR = isl_union_flow_get_may_dependence(Flow);
```

- This *is* the right model of WAW we need for reductions, just not in general.
- Reductions need to track only *strict* WAW, without any interfering reductions.

= Explanation: Why the new WAR dependences in tests are correct: =

- We no longer set WAR = WAR - WAW
- Hence, we will have WAR dependences that were originally removed.
- These may look incorrect, but in fact make sense.

== Code: ==
```lang=llvm, name=new-war-dependence.ll
  ;    void manyreductions(long *A) {
  ;      for (long i = 0; i < 1024; i++)
  ;        for (long j = 0; j < 1024; j++)
  ; S0:          *A += 42;
  ;
  ;      for (long i = 0; i < 1024; i++)
  ;        for (long j = 0; j < 1024; j++)
  ; S1:          *A += 42;
  ;
```
=== WAR dependence: ===
  {  S0[1023, 1023] -> S1[0, 0] }

- Between `S0[1023, 1023]` and `S1[0, 0]`, we will have the dependences:

```lang=cpp, name=dependence-incorrect, counterexample
        S0[1023, 1023]:
    *-- tmp = *A (load0)--*
WAR 2   add = tmp + 42    |
    *-> *A = add (store0) |
                         WAR 1
        S1[0, 0]:         |
        tmp = *A (load1)  |
        add = tmp + 42    |
        A = add (store1)<-*
```

- One may assume that WAR2 *hides* WAR1 (since store0 happens before
  store1). However, within a statement, Polly has no idea about the
  ordering of loads and stores.

- Hence, according to Polly, the code may have looked like this:
```lang=cpp, name=dependence-correct
    S0[1023, 1023]:
    A = add (store0)
    tmp = A (load0) ---*
    add = A + 42       |
                     WAR 1
    S1[0, 0]:          |
    tmp = A (load1)    |
    add = A + 42       |
    A = add (store1) <-*
```

- So, Polly  generates (correct) WAR dependences. It does not make sense
  to remove these dependences, since they are correct with respect to
  Polly's model.

    Reviewers: grosser, Meinersbur

    tags: #polly

    Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31386

llvm-svn: 299429
2017-04-04 13:08:23 +00:00
Siddharth Bhat 65f3d5201e [DependenceInfo] Track may-writes and build flow information in
Dependences::calculateDependences.

This ensures that we handle may-writes correctly when building
dependence information. Also add a test case checking correctness of
may-write information. Not handling it before was an oversight.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31075

llvm-svn: 298074
2017-03-17 12:31:28 +00:00
Siddharth Bhat 65c4026992 Set Dependences::RED to be non-null once Dependences::calculateDependences()
occurs, even if there is no actual reduction. This ensures correctness
with isl operations.

llvm-svn: 297981
2017-03-16 20:06:49 +00:00
Tobias Grosser 41f0d81b31 [test] Add reduction sequence test case [NFC]
This test case is a mini performance test case that shows the time needed for a
couple of simple reductions. It takes today about 325ms on my machine to run
this test case through 'opt' with scop construction and reduction detection. It
can be used as mini-proxy for further tuning of the reduction code.

Generally we do not commit performance test cases, but as this is very
small and also very fast it seems OK to keep it in the lit test suite.

This test case will also help to verify that future changes to the reduction
code will not affect the ordering of the reduction sets and will consequently
not cause spurious performance changes that only result from reordering of
dependences in the reduction set.

llvm-svn: 295549
2017-02-18 16:38:58 +00:00
Johannes Doerfert 3b7ac0a691 [GSoC] Do not process SCoPs with infeasible runtime context
Do not process SCoPs with infeasible runtime context in the new
  ScopInfoWrapperPass. Do not compute dependences for such SCoPs in the new
  DependenceInfoWrapperPass.

Patch by Utpal Bora <cs14mtech11017@iith.ac.in>

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22402

llvm-svn: 276631
2016-07-25 12:40:59 +00:00
Michael Kruse 586e579fe8 Fix assertion due to buildMemoryAccess.
For llvm the memory accesses from nonaffine loops should be visible,
however for polly those nonaffine loops should be invisible/boxed.

This fixes llvm.org/PR28245

Cointributed-by: Huihui Zhang <huihuiz@codeaurora.org>

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21591

llvm-svn: 274842
2016-07-08 12:38:28 +00:00
Johannes Doerfert c5cfe75a6a [GSoC 2016] New function pass DependenceInfoWrapperPass
This patch addresses:
  - A new function pass to compute polyhedral dependences. This is
    required to avoid the region pass manager.
  - Stores a map of Scop to Dependence object for all the scops present
    in a function. By default, access wise dependences are stored.

Patch by Utpal Bora <cs14mtech11017@iith.ac.in>

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21105

llvm-svn: 273881
2016-06-27 14:47:38 +00:00
Hongbin Zheng 52ae58259d Add fine-grain dependences analysis to release notes.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17905

llvm-svn: 264575
2016-03-28 12:41:49 +00:00
Tobias Grosser 25e8ebe29d Drop explicit -polly-delinearize parameter
Delinearization is now enabled by default and does not need to explicitly need
to be enabled in our tests.

llvm-svn: 264154
2016-03-23 13:21:02 +00:00
Hongbin Zheng b1908ea5b9 Update the fine-grain dependences analysis test case.
llvm-svn: 262101
2016-02-27 01:50:01 +00:00
Hongbin Zheng 9691d71674 Introduce fine-grain dependence analysis by tagging access functions and schedules tree with either the id of memory access or memory references.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17381

llvm-svn: 262039
2016-02-26 17:05:24 +00:00
Michael Kruse 959a8dc39f Update to ISL 0.16.1
llvm-svn: 257898
2016-01-15 15:54:45 +00:00
Michael Kruse 5a9a65e43f Prepare unit tests for update to ISL 0.16
ISL 0.16 will change how sets are printed which breaks 117 unit tests
that text-compare printed sets. This patch re-formats most of these unit
tests using a script and small manual editing on top of that. When
actually updating ISL, most work is done by just re-running the script
to adapt to the changed output.

Some tests that compare IR and tests with single CHECK-lines that can be
easily updated manually are not included here.

The re-format script will also be committed afterwards. The per-test
formatter invocation command lines options will not be added in the near
future because it is ad hoc and would overwrite the manual edits.
Ideally it also shouldn't be required anymore because ISL's set printing
has become more stable in 0.16.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16095

llvm-svn: 257851
2016-01-15 00:48:42 +00:00
Johannes Doerfert eca9e890b9 Remove read-only statements from the SCoP
We do not need to model read-only statements in the SCoP as they will
  not cause any side effects that are visible to the outside anyway.
  Removing them should safe us time and might even simplify the ASTs we
  generate.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14272

llvm-svn: 251948
2015-11-03 16:54:49 +00:00
Tobias Grosser f4ee371e60 tests: Drop -polly-detect-unprofitable and -polly-no-early-exit
These flags are now always passed to all tests and need to be disabled if
not needed. Disabling these flags, rather than passing them to almost all
tests, significantly simplfies our RUN: lines.

llvm-svn: 249422
2015-10-06 15:36:44 +00:00
Tobias Grosser b1c39429d9 Do not model delinearized and linearized access relation for a single access
A missing return statement that previously did not have a visibly negative
effect caused after some data-structure changes in r248024 multi-dimensional
accesses to be modeled both multi-dimensional as well as linearized. This
commit adds the missing return to avoid the incorrect double modeling as
well as the compile time increases it caused.

llvm-svn: 248171
2015-09-21 16:19:25 +00:00
Michael Kruse e2bccbbfb2 Merge IRAccess into MemoryAccess
All MemoryAccess objects will be owned by ScopInfo::AccFuncMap which 
previously stored the IRAccess objects. Instead of creating new 
MemoryAccess objects, the already created ones are reused, but their 
order might be different now. Some fields of IRAccess and MemoryAccess 
had the same meaning and are merged.

This is the last step of fusioning TempScopInfo.{h|cpp} and 
ScopInfo.{h.cpp}. Some refactoring might still make sense.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12843

llvm-svn: 248024
2015-09-18 19:59:43 +00:00
Tobias Grosser 5fd8c0961e Model fixed-size multi-dimensional arrays if possible multi-dimensional
If the GEP instructions give us enough insights, model scalar accesses as
multi-dimensional (and generate the relevant run-time checks to ensure
correctness). This will allow us to simplify the dependence computation in
a subsequent commit.

llvm-svn: 247906
2015-09-17 17:28:15 +00:00
Johannes Doerfert 883f8c1d2f Use modulo semantic to generate non-integer-overflow assumptions
This will allow to generate non-wrap assumptions for integer expressions
  that are part of the SCoP. We compare the common isl representation of
  the expression with one computed with modulo semantic. For all parameter
  combinations they are not equal we can have integer overflows.

  The nsw flags are respected when the modulo representation is computed,
  nuw and nw flags are ignored for now.

  In order to not increase compile time to much, the non-wrap assumptions
  are collected in a separate boundary context instead of the assumed
  context. This helps compile time as the boundary context can become
  complex and it is therefor not advised to use it in other operations
  except runtime check generation. However, the assumed context is e.g.,
  used to tighten dependences. While the boundary context might help to
  tighten the assumed context it is doubtful that it will help in practice
  (it does not effect lnt much) as the boundary (or no-wrap assumptions)
  only restrict the very end of the possible value range of parameters.

  PET uses a different approach to compute the no-wrap context, though lnt runs
  have shown that this version performs slightly better for us.

llvm-svn: 247732
2015-09-15 22:52:53 +00:00
Johannes Doerfert 96425c2574 Traverse the SCoP to compute non-loop-carried domain conditions
In order to compute domain conditions for conditionals we will now
  traverse the region in the ScopInfo once and build the domains for
  each block in the region. The SCoP statements can then use these
  constraints when they build their domain.

  The reason behind this change is twofold:
    1) This removes a big chunk of preprocessing logic from the
       TempScopInfo, namely the Conditionals we used to build there.
       Additionally to moving this logic it is also simplified. Instead
       of walking the dominance tree up for each basic block in the
       region (as we did before), we now traverse the region only
       once in order to collect the domain conditions.
    2) This is the first step towards the isl based domain creation.
       The second step will traverse the region similar to this step,
       however it will propagate back edge conditions. Once both are in
       place this conditional handling will allow multiple exit loops
       additional logic.

Reviewers: grosser

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12428

llvm-svn: 246398
2015-08-30 21:13:53 +00:00
Tobias Grosser ed21a1fc7e Do not detect Scops with only one loop.
If a region does not have more than one loop, we do not identify it as
a Scop in ScopDetection. The main optimizations Polly is currently performing
(tiling, preparation for outer-loop vectorization and loop fusion) are unlikely
to have a positive impact on individual loops. In some cases, Polly's run-time
alias checks or conditional hoisting may still have a positive impact, but those
are mostly enabling transformations which LLVM already performs for individual
loops. As we do not focus on individual loops, we leave them untouched to not
introduce compile time regressions and execution time noise. This results in
good compile time reduction (oourafft: -73.99%, smg2000: -56.25%).

Contributed-by: Pratik Bhatu <cs12b1010@iith.ac.in>

Reviewers: grosser

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12268

llvm-svn: 246161
2015-08-27 16:55:18 +00:00
Tobias Grosser c0f8452592 Fix test cases which fail due to changes in isl's set representation
llvm-svn: 245301
2015-08-18 15:28:02 +00:00
Tobias Grosser d2d15a8c65 Dependences: Zero pad the schedule map
The schedule map we derive from a schedule tree map may map statements into
schedule spaces of different dimensionality. This change adds zero padding
to ensure just a single schedule space is used and the translation from
a union_map to an isl_multi_union_pw_aff does not fail.

llvm-svn: 243849
2015-08-02 13:30:33 +00:00
Tobias Grosser 808cd69a92 Use schedule trees to represent execution order of statements
Instead of flat schedules, we now use so-called schedule trees to represent the
execution order of the statements in a SCoP. Schedule trees make it a lot easier
to analyze, understand and modify properties of a schedule, as specific nodes
in the tree can be choosen and possibly replaced.

This patch does not yet fully move our DependenceInfo pass to schedule trees,
as some additional performance analysis is needed here. (In general schedule
trees should be faster in compile-time, as the more structured representation
is generally easier to analyze and work with). We also can not yet perform the
reduction analysis on schedule trees.

For more information regarding schedule trees, please see Section 6 of
https://lirias.kuleuven.be/handle/123456789/497238

llvm-svn: 242130
2015-07-14 09:33:13 +00:00
Tobias Grosser 3e6070ef03 Update isl to c3892bebc0
Various smaller improvements and bugfixes.

llvm-svn: 236932
2015-05-09 09:37:30 +00:00
Tobias Grosser 173ecab705 Remove target triples from test cases
I just learned that target triples prevent test cases to be run on other
architectures. Polly test cases are until now sufficiently target independent
to not require any target triples. Hence, we drop them.

llvm-svn: 235384
2015-04-21 14:28:02 +00:00
Tobias Grosser 094999bb55 Drop unneccessary -basicaa passes in DependenceInfo test cases
llvm-svn: 235374
2015-04-21 09:17:52 +00:00
Johannes Doerfert f6557f98a2 Rename the Dependences pass to DependenceInfo [NFC]
We rename the Dependences pass to DependenceInfo as a first step to a
  caching pass policy. The new DependenceInfo pass will later provide
  "Dependences" for a SCoP.

  To keep consistency the test folder is renamed too.

llvm-svn: 231308
2015-03-04 22:43:40 +00:00