Commit Graph

5094 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tobias Grosser ecfe9d06eb SCEV: Use I = vector<>.erase(I) to iterate and delete at the same time
llvm-svn: 208282
2014-05-08 07:12:44 +00:00
Sebastian Pop b8d56f42b7 avoid segfaulting
*Quotient and *Remainder don't have to be initialized.

llvm-svn: 208238
2014-05-07 19:00:37 +00:00
Sebastian Pop a7d3d6ab9f do not collect undef terms
llvm-svn: 208237
2014-05-07 19:00:32 +00:00
Sebastian Pop 448712b1a6 split delinearization pass in 3 steps
To compute the dimensions of the array in a unique way, we split the
delinearization analysis in three steps:

- find parametric terms in all memory access functions
- compute the array dimensions from the set of terms
- compute the delinearized access functions for each dimension

The first step is executed on all the memory access functions such that we
gather all the patterns in which an array is accessed. The second step reduces
all this information in a unique description of the sizes of the array. The
third step is delinearizing each memory access function following the common
description of the shape of the array computed in step 2.

This rewrite of the delinearization pass also solves a problem we had with the
previous implementation: because the previous algorithm was by induction on the
structure of the SCEV, it would not correctly recognize the shape of the array
when the memory access was not following the nesting of the loops: for example,
see polly/test/ScopInfo/multidim_only_ivs_3d_reverse.ll

; void foo(long n, long m, long o, double A[n][m][o]) {
;
;   for (long i = 0; i < n; i++)
;     for (long j = 0; j < m; j++)
;       for (long k = 0; k < o; k++)
;         A[i][k][j] = 1.0;

Starting with this patch we no longer delinearize access functions that do not
contain parameters, for example in test/Analysis/DependenceAnalysis/GCD.ll

;;  for (long int i = 0; i < 100; i++)
;;    for (long int j = 0; j < 100; j++) {
;;      A[2*i - 4*j] = i;
;;      *B++ = A[6*i + 8*j];

these accesses will not be delinearized as the upper bound of the loops are
constants, and their access functions do not contain SCEVUnknown parameters.

llvm-svn: 208232
2014-05-07 18:01:20 +00:00
Tobias Grosser 924221cb37 [C++11] Add NArySCEV->Operands iterator range
llvm-svn: 208158
2014-05-07 06:07:47 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 87c40fdfdb blockfreq: Move include to .cpp
llvm-svn: 208035
2014-05-06 01:57:42 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 312dddfb81 [LCG] Add the last (and most complex) of the edge insertion mutation
operations on the call graph. This one forms a cycle, and while not as
complex as removing an internal edge from an SCC, it involves
a reasonable amount of work to find all of the nodes newly connected in
a cycle.

Also somewhat alarming is the worst case complexity here: it might have
to walk roughly the entire SCC inverse DAG to insert a single edge. This
is carefully documented in the API (I hope).

llvm-svn: 207935
2014-05-04 09:38:32 +00:00
Juergen Ributzka d35c114d15 [TBAA] Fix handling of mixed TBAA (path-aware and non-path-aware TBAA).
This fix simply ensures that both metadata nodes are path-aware before
performing path-aware alias analysis.

This issue isn't normally triggered in LLVM, because we perform an autoupgrade
of the TBAA metadata to the new format when reading in LL or BC files. This
issue only appears when a client creates the IR manually and mixes old and new
TBAA metadata format.

This fixes <rdar://problem/16760860>.

llvm-svn: 207923
2014-05-03 22:32:52 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 7cc4ed8202 [LCG] Add the other simple edge insertion API to the call graph. This
just connects an SCC to one of its descendants directly. Not much of an
impact. The last one is the hard one -- connecting an SCC to one of its
ancestors, and thereby forming a cycle such that we have to merge all
the SCCs participating in the cycle.

llvm-svn: 207751
2014-05-01 12:18:20 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 034d0d6805 [LCG] Don't lookup the child SCC twice. Spotted this by inspection, and
no functionality changed.

llvm-svn: 207750
2014-05-01 12:16:31 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 4b096741b4 [LCG] Add some basic methods for querying the parent/child relationships
of SCCs in the SCC DAG. Exercise them in the big graph test case. These
will be especially useful for establishing invariants in insertion
logic.

llvm-svn: 207749
2014-05-01 12:12:42 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 5217c94522 [LCG] Add the really, *really* boring edge insertion case: adding an
edge entirely within an existing SCC. Shockingly, making the connected
component more connected is ... a total snooze fest. =]

Anyways, its wired up, and I even added a test case to make sure it
pretty much sorta works. =D

llvm-svn: 207631
2014-04-30 10:48:36 +00:00
Chandler Carruth c5026b670e [LCG] Actually test the *basic* edge removal bits (IE, the non-SCC
bits), and discover that it's totally broken. Yay tests. Boo bug. Fix
the basic edge removal so that it works by nulling out the removed edges
rather than actually removing them. This leaves the indices valid in the
map from callee to index, and preserves some of the locality for
iterating over edges. The iterator is made bidirectional to reflect that
it now has to skip over null entries, and the skipping logic is layered
onto it.

As future work, I would like to track essentially the "load factor" of
the edge list, and when it falls below a threshold do a compaction.

An alternative I considered (and continue to consider) is storing the
callees in a doubly linked list where each element of the list is in
a set (which is essentially the classical linked-hash-table
datastructure). The problem with that approach is that either you need
to heap allocate the linked list nodes and use pointers to them, or use
a bucket hash table (with even *more* linked list pointer overhead!),
etc. It's pretty easy to get 5x overhead for values that are just
pointers. So far, I think punching holes in the vector, and periodic
compaction is likely to be much more efficient overall in the space/time
tradeoff.

llvm-svn: 207619
2014-04-30 07:45:27 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer d59664f4f7 raw_ostream: Forward declare OpenFlags and include FileSystem.h only where necessary.
llvm-svn: 207593
2014-04-29 23:26:49 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith d22bea7dad blockfreq: Defer to BranchProbability::scale()
`BlockMass` can now defer to `BranchProbability::scale()`.

llvm-svn: 207547
2014-04-29 16:20:05 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 295b5e7481 blockfreq: Remove more extra typenames from r207438
llvm-svn: 207440
2014-04-28 20:22:29 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith c5a3139ebd Reapply "blockfreq: Approximate irreducible control flow"
This reverts commit r207287, reapplying r207286.

I'm hoping that declaring an explicit struct and instantiating
`addBlockEdges()` directly works around the GCC crash from r207286.
This is a lot more boilerplate, though.

llvm-svn: 207438
2014-04-28 20:02:29 +00:00
Chandler Carruth c00a7ff4b7 [LCG] Add the most basic of edge insertion to the lazy call graph. This
just handles the pre-DFS case. Also add some test cases for this case to
make sure it works.

llvm-svn: 207411
2014-04-28 11:10:23 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 3f5f5fe164 [LCG] Make the return of the IntraSCC removal method actually match its
contract (and be much more useful). It now provides exactly the
post-order traversal a caller might need to perform on newly formed
SCCs.

llvm-svn: 207410
2014-04-28 10:49:06 +00:00
Chandler Carruth e01fd5f63a [inliner] Significantly improve the compile time in cases like PR19499
by avoiding inlining massive switches merely because they have no
instructions in them. These switches still show up where we fail to form
lookup tables, and in those cases they are actually going to cause
a very significant code size hit anyways, so inlining them is not the
right call. The right way to fix any performance regressions stemming
from this is to enhance the switch-to-lookup-table logic to fire in more
places.

This makes PR19499 about 5x less bad. It uncovers a second compile time
problem in that test case that is unrelated (surprisingly!).

llvm-svn: 207403
2014-04-28 08:52:44 +00:00
Craig Topper e73658ddbb [C++] Use 'nullptr'.
llvm-svn: 207394
2014-04-28 04:05:08 +00:00
Chandler Carruth aa839b22c9 [LCG] Re-organize the methods for mutating a call graph to make their
API requirements much more obvious.

The key here is that there are two totally different use cases for
mutating the graph. Prior to doing any SCC formation, it is very easy to
mutate the graph. There may be users that want to do small tweaks here,
and then use the already-built graph for their SCC-based operations.
This method remains on the graph itself and is documented carefully as
being cheap but unavailable once SCCs are formed.

Once SCCs are formed, and there is some in-flight DFS building them, we
have to be much more careful in how we mutate the graph. These mutation
operations are sunk onto the SCCs themselves, which both simplifies
things (the code was already there!) and helps make it obvious that
these interfaces are only applicable within that context. The other
primary constraint is that the edge being mutated is actually related to
the SCC on which we call the method. This helps make it obvious that you
cannot arbitrarily mutate some other SCC.

I've tried to write much more complete documentation for the interesting
mutation API -- intra-SCC edge removal. Currently one aspect of this
documentation is a lie (the result list of SCCs) but we also don't even
have tests for that API. =[ I'm going to add tests and fix it to match
the documentation next.

llvm-svn: 207339
2014-04-27 01:59:50 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 90821c2a93 [LCG] Rather than removing nodes from the SCC entry set when we process
them, just skip over any DFS-numbered nodes when finding the next root
of a DFS. This allows the entry set to just be a vector as we populate
it from a uniqued source. It also removes the possibility for a linear
scan of the entry set to actually do the removal which can make things
go quadratic if we get unlucky.

llvm-svn: 207312
2014-04-26 09:45:55 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 5e2d70b9a3 [LCG] Rotate the full SCC finding algorithm to avoid round-trips through
the DFS stack for leaves in the call graph. As mentioned in my previous
commit, this is particularly interesting for graphs which have high fan
out but low connectivity resulting in many leaves. For such graphs, this
can remove a large % of the DFS stack traffic even though it doesn't
make the stack much smaller.

It's a bit easier to formulate this for the full algorithm because that
one stops completely for each SCC. For example, I was able to directly
eliminate the "Recurse" boolean used to continue an outer loop from the
inner loop.

llvm-svn: 207311
2014-04-26 09:28:00 +00:00
Chandler Carruth aca48d0443 [LCG] Hoist the main DFS loop out of the edge removal function. This
makes working through the worklist much cleaner, and makes it possible
to avoid the 'bool-to-continue-the-outer-loop' hack. Not a huge
difference, but I think this is approaching as polished as I can make
it.

llvm-svn: 207310
2014-04-26 09:06:53 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 680af7a78c [LCG] In the incremental SCC re-formation, lift the node currently being
processed in the DFS out of the stack completely. Keep it exclusively in
a variable. Re-shuffle some code structure to make this easier. This can
have a very dramatic effect in some cases because call graphs tend to
look like a high fan-out spanning tree. As a consequence, there are
a large number of leaf nodes in the graph, and this technique causes
leaf nodes to never even go into the stack. While this only reduces the
max depth by 1, it may cause the total number of round trips through the
stack to drop by a lot.

Now, most of this isn't really relevant for the incremental version. =]
But I wanted to prototype it first here as this variant is in ways more
complex. As long as I can get the code factored well here, I'll next
make the primary walk look the same. There are several refactorings this
exposes I think.

llvm-svn: 207306
2014-04-26 03:36:42 +00:00
Chandler Carruth a7205b6154 [LCG] Special case the removal of self edges. These don't impact the SCC
graph in any way because we don't track edges in the SCC graph, just
nodes. This also lets us add a nice assert about the invariant that
we're working on at least a certain number of nodes within the SCC.

llvm-svn: 207305
2014-04-26 03:36:37 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 8f92d6db22 [LCG] Refactor the duplicated code I added in my last commit here into
a helper function. Also factor the other two places where we did the
same thing into the helper function. =] Much cleaner this way. NFC.

llvm-svn: 207300
2014-04-26 01:03:46 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 42292ceaa9 Revert "blockfreq: Approximate irreducible control flow"
This reverts commit r207286.  It causes an ICE on the
cmake-llvm-x86_64-linux buildbot [1]:

    llvm/lib/Analysis/BlockFrequencyInfo.cpp: In lambda function:
    llvm/lib/Analysis/BlockFrequencyInfo.cpp:182:1: internal compiler error: in get_expr_operands, at tree-ssa-operands.c:1035

[1]: http://bb.pgr.jp/builders/cmake-llvm-x86_64-linux/builds/12093/steps/build_llvm/logs/stdio

llvm-svn: 207287
2014-04-25 23:16:58 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 384d0e8ad4 blockfreq: Approximate irreducible control flow
Previously, irreducible backedges were ignored.  With this commit,
irreducible SCCs are discovered on the fly, and modelled as loops with
multiple headers.

This approximation specifies the headers of irreducible sub-SCCs as its
entry blocks and all nodes that are targets of a backedge within it
(excluding backedges within true sub-loops).  Block frequency
calculations act as if we insert a new block that intercepts all the
edges to the headers.  All backedges and entries to the irreducible SCC
point to this imaginary block.  This imaginary block has an edge (with
even probability) to each header block.

The result is now reasonable enough that I've added a number of
testcases for irreducible control flow.  I've outlined in
`BlockFrequencyInfoImpl.h` ways to improve the approximation.

<rdar://problem/14292693>

llvm-svn: 207286
2014-04-25 23:08:57 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith da5eaeda01 blockfreq: Further shift logic to LoopData
Move a lot of the loop-related logic that was sprinkled around the code
into `LoopData`.

<rdar://problem/14292693>

llvm-svn: 207258
2014-04-25 18:47:04 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith d2b2facb07 SCC: Change clients to use const, NFC
It's fishy to be changing the `std::vector<>` owned by the iterator, and
no one actual does it, so I'm going to remove the ability in a
subsequent commit.  First, update the users.

<rdar://problem/14292693>

llvm-svn: 207252
2014-04-25 18:24:50 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 9ba7762d7f [LCG] During the incremental update of an SCC, switch to using the
SCCMap to test for nodes that have been re-added to the root SCC rather
than a set vector. We already have done the SCCMap lookup, we juts need
to test it in two different ways. In turn, do most of the processing of
these nodes as they go into the root SCC rather than lazily. This
simplifies the final loop to just stitch the root SCC into its
children's parent sets. No functionlatiy changed.

However, this makes a few things painfully obvious, which was my intent.
=] There is tons of repeated code introduced here and elsewhere. I'm
splitting the refactoring of that code into helpers from this change so
its clear that this is the change which switches the datastructures used
around, and the other is a pure factoring & deduplication of code
change.

llvm-svn: 207217
2014-04-25 09:52:44 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 2e6ef0e80f [LCG] During the incremental re-build of an SCC after removing an edge,
remove the nodes in the SCC from the SCC map entirely prior to the DFS
walk. This allows the SCC map to represent both the state of
not-yet-re-added-to-an-SCC and added-back-to-this-SCC independently. The
first is being missing from the SCC map, the second is mapping back to
'this'. In a subsequent commit, I'm going to use this property to
simplify the new node list for this SCC.

In theory, I think this also makes the contract for orphaning a node
from the graph slightly less confusing. Now it is also orphaned from the
SCC graph. Still, this isn't quite right either, and so I'm not adding
test cases here. I'll add test cases for the behavior of orphaning nodes
when the code *actually* supports it. The change here is mostly
incidental, my goal is simplifying the algorithm.

llvm-svn: 207213
2014-04-25 09:08:10 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 770060ddfa [LCG] Rather than doing a linear time SmallSetVector removal of each
child from the worklist, wait until we actually need to pop another
element off of the worklist and skip over any that were already visited
by the DFS. This also enables swapping the nodes of the SCC into the
worklist. No functionality changed.

llvm-svn: 207212
2014-04-25 09:08:05 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 6b88e3a545 [LCG] Remove a completely unnecessary loop. It wasn't even doing any
thing, just mucking up the code. I feel bad that I even wrote this loop.
Very sorry. The diff is huge because of the indent change, but I promise
all this is doing is realizing that the outer two loops were actually
the exact same loops, and we didn't need two of them.

llvm-svn: 207202
2014-04-25 06:45:06 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 774c9320c0 [LCG] Now that the loop structure of the core SCC finding routine is
factored into a more reasonable form, replace the tail call with
a simple outer-loop continuation. It's sad that C++ makes this so
awkward to write, but it seems more direct and clear than the tail call
at this point.

llvm-svn: 207201
2014-04-25 06:38:58 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith cb7d29d30c blockfreq: Only one mass distribution per node
Remove the concepts of "forward" and "general" mass distributions, which
was wrong.  The split might have made sense in an early version of the
algorithm, but it's definitely wrong now.

<rdar://problem/14292693>

llvm-svn: 207195
2014-04-25 04:38:43 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith ebf7626988 blockfreq: Document assertion
<rdar://problem/14292693>

llvm-svn: 207194
2014-04-25 04:38:40 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 3f086789ff blockfreq: Document high-level functions
<rdar://problem/14292693>

llvm-svn: 207191
2014-04-25 04:38:32 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 5291d2a561 blockfreq: Scale LoopData::Scale on the way down
Rather than scaling loop headers and then scaling all the loop members
by the header frequency, scale `LoopData::Scale` itself, and scale the
loop members by it.  It's much more obvious what's going on this way,
and doesn't cost any extra multiplies.

<rdar://problem/14292693>

llvm-svn: 207189
2014-04-25 04:38:27 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 0633f0ec29 blockfreq: unwrapLoopPackage() => unwrapLoop()
<rdar://problem/14292693>

llvm-svn: 207188
2014-04-25 04:38:25 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith da0b21cf96 blockfreq: Pass the Loop directly into unwrapLoopPackage()
<rdar://problem/14292693>

llvm-svn: 207187
2014-04-25 04:38:23 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 575bd8c81b blockfreq: Unwrap from Loops
When unwrapping loops, just visit the loops rather than all nodes.

<rdar://problem/14292693>

llvm-svn: 207186
2014-04-25 04:38:20 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 46d9a56ce6 blockfreq: Separate unwrapLoops() from finalizeMetrics()
<rdar://problem/14292693>

llvm-svn: 207185
2014-04-25 04:38:17 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith c9b7cfea2f blockfreq: Expose getPackagedNode()
Make `getPackagedNode()` a member function of
`BlockFrequencyInfoImplBase` so that it's available for templated code.

<rdar://problem/14292693>

llvm-svn: 207183
2014-04-25 04:38:12 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 1cab8a0708 blockfreq: Store the header with the members
<rdar://problem/14292693>

llvm-svn: 207182
2014-04-25 04:38:09 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 39cc64827e blockfreq: Encapsulate LoopData::Header
<rdar://problem/14292693>

llvm-svn: 207181
2014-04-25 04:38:06 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith d132040ed6 blockfreq: Use LoopData directly
Instead of passing around loop headers, pass around `LoopData` directly.

<rdar://problem/14292693>

llvm-svn: 207179
2014-04-25 04:38:01 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith fc7dc93031 blockfreq: Use a std::list for Loops
As pointed out by David Blaikie in code review, a `std::list<T>` is
simpler than a `std::vector<std::unique_ptr<T>>`.  Another option is a
`std::deque<T>` (which allocates in chunks), but I'd like to leave open
the option of inserting in the middle of the sequence for handling
irreducible control flow on the fly.

<rdar://problem/14292693>

llvm-svn: 207177
2014-04-25 04:30:06 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 91dcf0f977 [LCG] Switch a weird do/while loop that actually couldn't fail its
condition into an obviously infinite loop with an assert about the
degenerate condition. No functionality changed.

llvm-svn: 207147
2014-04-24 21:19:30 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 24553934f8 [LCG] Incorporate the core trick of improvements on the naive Tarjan's
algorithm here: http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=177301.

The idea of isolating the roots has even more relevance when using the
stack not just to implement the DFS but also to implement the recursive
step. Because we use it for the recursive step, to isolate the roots we
need to maintain two stacks: one for our recursive DFS walk, and another
of the nodes that have been walked. The nice thing is that the latter
will be half the size. It also fixes a complete hack where we scanned
backwards over the stack to find the next potential-root to continue
processing. Now that is always the top of the DFS stack.

While this is a really nice improvement already (IMO) it further opens
the door for two important simplifications:

1) De-duplicating some of the code across the two different walks. I've
   actually made the duplication a bit worse in some senses with this
   patch because the two are starting to converge.
2) Dramatically simplifying the loop structures of both walks.

I wanted to do those separately as they'll be essentially *just* CFG
restructuring. This patch on the other hand actually uses different
datastructures to implement the algorithm itself.

llvm-svn: 207098
2014-04-24 11:05:20 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 09751bf173 [LCG] Rotate logic applied to the top of the DFSStack to instead be
applied prior to pushing a node onto the DFSStack. This is the first
step toward avoiding the stack entirely for leaf nodes. It also
simplifies things a bit and I think is pointing the way toward factoring
some more of the shared logic out of the two implementations.

It is also making it more obvious how to restructure the loops
themselves to be a bit easier to read (although no different in terms of
functionality).

llvm-svn: 207095
2014-04-24 09:59:59 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 493e0a6ad0 [LCG] Switch the parent SCC tracking from a SmallSetVector to
a SmallPtrSet. Currently, there is no need for stable iteration in this
dimension, and I now thing there won't need to be going forward.

If this is ever re-introduced in any form, it needs to not be
a SetVector based solution because removal cannot be linear. There will
be many SCCs with large numbers of parents. When encountering these, the
incremental SCC update for intra-SCC edge removal was quadratic due to
linear removal (kind of).

I'm really hoping we can avoid having an ordering property here at all
though...

llvm-svn: 207091
2014-04-24 09:22:31 +00:00
Chandler Carruth d52f8e0e4d [LCG] We don't actually need a set in each SCC to track the nodes. We
can use the node -> SCC mapping in the top-level graph to test this on
the rare occasions we need it.

llvm-svn: 207090
2014-04-24 08:55:36 +00:00
Craig Topper 353eda484c [C++] Use 'nullptr'.
llvm-svn: 207083
2014-04-24 06:44:33 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 6a4fee87bc [LCG] Normalize the post-order SCC iterator to just iterate over the SCC
values rather than having pointers in weird places.

llvm-svn: 207053
2014-04-23 23:51:07 +00:00
Chandler Carruth bd5d3082c4 [LCG] Switch the primary node iterator to be a *much* more normal C++
iterator, returning a Node by reference on dereference.

llvm-svn: 207048
2014-04-23 23:34:48 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 2a898e0df6 [LCG] Make the insertion and query paths into the LCG which cannot fail
return references to better model this property.

No functionality changed.

llvm-svn: 207047
2014-04-23 23:20:36 +00:00
Chandler Carruth a10e240377 [LCG] Switch the SCC lookup to be in terms of call graph nodes rather
than functions. So far, this access pattern is *much* more common. It
seems likely that any user of this interface is going to have nodes at
the point that they are querying the SCCs.

No functionality changed.

llvm-svn: 207045
2014-04-23 23:12:06 +00:00
Chandler Carruth b4a04da0b9 [LCG] Switch the primary SCC building code to use the negative low-link
values rather than an expensive dense map query to test whether children
have already been popped into an SCC. This matches the incremental SCC
building code. I've also included the assert that I put there but
updated both of their text.

No functionality changed here.

I still don't have any great ideas for sharing the code between the two
implementations, but I may try a brute-force approach to factoring it at
some point.

llvm-svn: 207042
2014-04-23 22:28:13 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 9302fbf0ae [LCG] Add the first round of mutation support to the lazy call graph.
This implements the core functionality necessary to remove an edge from
the call graph and correctly update both the basic graph and the SCC
structure. As part of that it has to run a tiny (in number of nodes)
Tarjan-style DFS walk of an SCC being mutated to compute newly formed
SCCs, etc.

This is *very rough* and a WIP. I have a bunch of FIXMEs for code
cleanup that will reduce the boilerplate in this change substantially.
I also have a bunch of simplifications to various parts of both
algorithms that I want to make, but first I'd like to have a more
holistic picture. Ideally, I'd also like more testing. I'll probably add
quite a few more unit tests as I go here to cover the various different
aspects and corner cases of removing edges from the graph.

Still, this is, so far, successfully updating the SCC graph in-place
without disrupting the identity established for the existing SCCs even
when we do challenging things like delete the critical edge that made an
SCC cycle at all and have to reform things as a tree of smaller SCCs.
Getting this to work is really critical for the new pass manager as it
is going to associate significant state with the SCC instance and needs
it to be stable. That is also the motivation behind the return of the
newly formed SCCs. Eventually, I'll wire this all the way up to the
public API so that the pass manager can use it to correctly re-enqueue
newly formed SCCs into a fresh postorder traversal.

llvm-svn: 206968
2014-04-23 11:03:03 +00:00
Chandler Carruth cace6623c4 [LCG] Implement Tarjan's algorithm correctly this time. We have to walk
up the stack finishing the exploration of each entries children before
we're finished in addition to accounting for their low-links. Added
a unittest that really hammers home the need for this with interlocking
cycles that would each appear distinct otherwise and crash or compute
the wrong result. As part of this, nuke a stale fixme and bring the rest
of the implementation still more closely in line with the original
algorithm.

llvm-svn: 206966
2014-04-23 10:31:17 +00:00
Chandler Carruth c7bad9a5a0 [LCG] Add a unittest for the LazyCallGraph. I had a weak moment and
resisted this for too long. Just with the basic testing here I was able
to exercise the analysis in more detail and sift out both type signature
bugs in the API and a bug in the DFS numbering. All of these are fixed
here as well.

The unittests will be much more important for the mutation support where
it is necessary to craft minimal mutations and then inspect the state of
the graph. There is just no way to do that with a standard FileCheck
test. However, unittesting these kinds of analyses is really quite easy,
especially as they're designed with the new pass manager where there is
essentially no infrastructure required to rig up the core logic and
exercise it at an API level.

As a minor aside about the DFS numbering bug, the DFS numbering used in
LCG is a bit unusual. Rather than numbering from 0, we number from 1,
and use 0 as the sentinel "unvisited" state. Other implementations often
use '-1' for this, but I find it easier to deal with 0 and it shouldn't
make any real difference provided someone doesn't write silly bugs like
forgetting to actually initialize the DFS numbering. Oops. ;]

llvm-svn: 206954
2014-04-23 08:08:49 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 3f9869a8e2 [LCG] Hoist the logic for forming a new SCC from the top of the DFSStack
into a helper function. I plan to re-use it for doing incremental
DFS-based updates to the SCCs when we mutate the call graph.

llvm-svn: 206948
2014-04-23 06:09:03 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 0b623baeb3 [LCG] Switch the Callee sets to be DenseMaps pointing to the index into
the Callee list. This is going to be quite important to prevent removal
from going quadratic. No functionality changed at this point, this is
one of the refactoring patches I've broken out of my initial work toward
mutation updates of the call graph.

llvm-svn: 206938
2014-04-23 04:00:17 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith b3380ea60a blockfreq: Skip irreducible backedges inside functions
The branch that skips irreducible backedges was only active when
propagating mass at the top-level.  In particular, when propagating mass
through a loop recognized by `LoopInfo` with irreducible control flow
inside, irreducible backedges would not be skipped.

Not sure where that idea came from, but the result was that mass was
lost until after loop exit.  Added a testcase that covers this case.

llvm-svn: 206860
2014-04-22 03:31:53 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith d1aec79d7a blockfreq: Rename PackagedLoops => Loops
llvm-svn: 206859
2014-04-22 03:31:50 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 2984a64bae blockfreq: Use a pointer for ContainingLoop too
llvm-svn: 206858
2014-04-22 03:31:44 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith e1423639bb blockfreq: Use pointers to loops instead of an index
Store pointers directly to loops inside the nodes.  This could have been
done without changing the type stored in `std::vector<>`.  However,
rather than computing the number of loops before constructing them
(which `LoopInfo` doesn't provide directly), I've switched to a
`vector<unique_ptr<LoopData>>`.

This adds some heap overhead, but the number of loops is typically
small.

llvm-svn: 206857
2014-04-22 03:31:37 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith dc2d66e7b3 blockfreq: Implement clear() explicitly
This was implicitly with copy assignment before, which fails to actually
clear `std::vector<>`'s heap storage.  Move assignment would work, but
since MSVC can't imply those anyway, explicitly `clear()`-ing members
makes more sense.

llvm-svn: 206856
2014-04-22 03:31:34 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith cc88ebfa5f blockfreq: Rename PackagedLoopData => LoopData
No functionality change.

llvm-svn: 206855
2014-04-22 03:31:31 +00:00
Chandler Carruth f1221bd01b [Modules] Fix potential ODR violations by sinking the DEBUG_TYPE
definition below all the header #include lines, lib/Analysis/...
edition.

This one has a bit extra as there were *other* #define's before #include
lines in addition to DEBUG_TYPE. I've sunk all of them as a block.

llvm-svn: 206843
2014-04-22 02:48:03 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 1b9dde087e [Modules] Remove potential ODR violations by sinking the DEBUG_TYPE
define below all header includes in the lib/CodeGen/... tree. While the
current modules implementation doesn't check for this kind of ODR
violation yet, it is likely to grow support for it in the future. It
also removes one layer of macro pollution across all the included
headers.

Other sub-trees will follow.

llvm-svn: 206837
2014-04-22 02:02:50 +00:00
Chandler Carruth e96dd8975f [Modules] Make Support/Debug.h modular. This requires it to not change
behavior based on other files defining DEBUG_TYPE, which means it cannot
define DEBUG_TYPE at all. This is actually better IMO as it forces folks
to define relevant DEBUG_TYPEs for their files. However, it requires all
files that currently use DEBUG(...) to define a DEBUG_TYPE if they don't
already. I've updated all such files in LLVM and will do the same for
other upstream projects.

This still leaves one important change in how LLVM uses the DEBUG_TYPE
macro going forward: we need to only define the macro *after* header
files have been #include-ed. Previously, this wasn't possible because
Debug.h required the macro to be pre-defined. This commit removes that.
By defining DEBUG_TYPE after the includes two things are fixed:

- Header files that need to provide a DEBUG_TYPE for some inline code
  can do so by defining the macro before their inline code and undef-ing
  it afterward so the macro does not escape.

- We no longer have rampant ODR violations due to including headers with
  different DEBUG_TYPE definitions. This may be mostly an academic
  violation today, but with modules these types of violations are easy
  to check for and potentially very relevant.

Where necessary to suppor headers with DEBUG_TYPE, I have moved the
definitions below the includes in this commit. I plan to move the rest
of the DEBUG_TYPE macros in LLVM in subsequent commits; this one is big
enough.

The comments in Debug.h, which were hilariously out of date already,
have been updated to reflect the recommended practice going forward.

llvm-svn: 206822
2014-04-21 22:55:11 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 254689fcf9 blockfreq: Some cleanup of UnsignedFloat
Change `PositiveFloat` to `UnsignedFloat`, and fix some of the comments
to indicate that it's disappearing eventually.

llvm-svn: 206771
2014-04-21 18:31:58 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 10be9a8868 Reapply "blockfreq: Rewrite BlockFrequencyInfoImpl"
This reverts commit r206707, reapplying r206704.  The preceding commit
to CalcSpillWeights should have sorted out the failing buildbots.

<rdar://problem/14292693>

llvm-svn: 206766
2014-04-21 17:57:07 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 572e3407c3 [PM] Add a new-PM-style CGSCC pass manager using the newly added
LazyCallGraph analysis framework. Wire it up all the way through the opt
driver and add some very basic testing that we can build pass pipelines
including these components. Still a lot more to do in terms of testing
that all of this works, but the basic pieces are here.

There is a *lot* of boiler plate here. It's something I'm going to
actively look at reducing, but I don't have any immediate ideas that
don't end up making the code terribly complex in order to fold away the
boilerplate. Until I figure out something to minimize the boilerplate,
almost all of this is based on the code for the existing pass managers,
copied and heavily adjusted to suit the needs of the CGSCC pass
management layer.

The actual CG management still has a bunch of FIXMEs in it. Notably, we
don't do *any* updating of the CG as it is potentially invalidated.
I wanted to get this in place to motivate the new analysis, and add
update APIs to the analysis and the pass management layers in concert to
make sure that the *right* APIs are present.

llvm-svn: 206745
2014-04-21 11:12:00 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 99b756db04 [LCG] Add some basic debug output to the LCG pass.
llvm-svn: 206730
2014-04-21 05:04:24 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith e63327e967 Revert "blockfreq: Rewrite BlockFrequencyInfoImpl"
This reverts commit r206704, as expected.

llvm-svn: 206707
2014-04-19 22:46:00 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 875ddfac75 Reapply "blockfreq: Rewrite BlockFrequencyInfoImpl"
This reverts commit r206677, reapplying my BlockFrequencyInfo rewrite.

I've done a careful audit, added some asserts, and fixed a couple of
bugs (unfortunately, they were in unlikely code paths).  There's a small
chance that this will appease the failing bots [1][2].  (If so, great!)

If not, I have a follow-up commit ready that will temporarily add
-debug-only=block-freq to the two failing tests, allowing me to compare
the code path between what the failing bots and what my machines (and
the rest of the bots) are doing.  Once I've triggered those builds, I'll
revert both commits so the bots go green again.

[1]: http://bb.pgr.jp/builders/ninja-x64-msvc-RA-centos6/builds/1816
[2]: http://llvm-amd64.freebsd.your.org/b/builders/clang-i386-freebsd/builds/18445

<rdar://problem/14292693>

llvm-svn: 206704
2014-04-19 22:34:26 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 76b813619a Revert "blockfreq: Rewrite BlockFrequencyInfoImpl" (#2)
This reverts commit r206666, as planned.

Still stumped on why the bots are failing.  Sanitizer bots haven't
turned anything up.  If anyone can help me debug either of the failures
(referenced in r206666) I'll owe them a beer.  (In the meantime, I'll be
auditing my patch for undefined behaviour.)

llvm-svn: 206677
2014-04-19 00:42:46 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith b3caf3646f Reapply "blockfreq: Rewrite BlockFrequencyInfoImpl" (#2)
This reverts commit r206628, reapplying r206622 (and r206626).

Two tests are failing only on buildbots [1][2]: i.e., I can't reproduce
on Darwin, and Chandler can't reproduce on Linux.  Asan and valgrind
don't tell us anything, but we're hoping the msan bot will catch it.

So, I'm applying this again to get more feedback from the bots.  I'll
leave it in long enough to trigger builds in at least the sanitizer
buildbots (it was failing for reasons unrelated to my commit last time
it was in), and hopefully a few others.... and then I expect to revert a
third time.

[1]: http://bb.pgr.jp/builders/ninja-x64-msvc-RA-centos6/builds/1816
[2]: http://llvm-amd64.freebsd.your.org/b/builders/clang-i386-freebsd/builds/18445

llvm-svn: 206666
2014-04-18 22:30:03 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 2174f44f61 [LCG] Fix the bugs that Ben pointed out in code review (and the MSan bot
caught). Sad that we don't have warnings for these things, but bleh, no
idea how to fix that.

llvm-svn: 206646
2014-04-18 20:44:16 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 147644d400 Remove a couple of redundant copies of SmallVector::operator==.
No functionality change.

llvm-svn: 206635
2014-04-18 19:48:03 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 0842ff36a6 Revert "blockfreq: Rewrite BlockFrequencyInfoImpl" (#2)
This reverts commit r206622 and the MSVC fixup in r206626.

Apparently the remotely failing tests are still failing, despite my
attempt to fix the nondeterminism in r206621.

llvm-svn: 206628
2014-04-18 17:56:08 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 38fe464df0 Fixing MSVC after r206622?
llvm-svn: 206626
2014-04-18 17:38:01 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith f8361d127a Reapply "blockfreq: Rewrite BlockFrequencyInfoImpl"
This reverts commit r206556, effectively reapplying commit r206548 and
its fixups in r206549 and r206550.

In an intervening commit I've added target triples to the tests that
were failing remotely [1] (but passing locally).  I'm hoping the mystery
is solved?  I'll revert this again if the tests are still failing
remotely.

[1]: http://bb.pgr.jp/builders/ninja-x64-msvc-RA-centos6/builds/1816

llvm-svn: 206622
2014-04-18 17:22:25 +00:00
Chandler Carruth d8d865e266 [LCG] Remove all of the complexity stemming from supporting copying.
Reality is that we're never going to copy one of these. Supporting this
was becoming a nightmare because nothing even causes it to compile most
of the time. Lots of subtle errors built up that wouldn't have been
caught by any "normal" testing.

Also, make the move assignment actually work rather than the bogus swap
implementation that would just infloop if used. As part of that, factor
out the graph pointer updates into a helper to share between move
construction and move assignment.

llvm-svn: 206583
2014-04-18 11:02:33 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 18eadd9260 [LCG] Add support for building persistent and connected SCCs to the
LazyCallGraph. This is the start of the whole point of this different
abstraction, but it is just the initial bits. Here is a run-down of
what's going on here. I'm planning to incorporate some (or all) of this
into comments going forward, hopefully with better editing and wording.
=]

The crux of the problem with the traditional way of building SCCs is
that they are ephemeral. The new pass manager however really needs the
ability to associate analysis passes and results of analysis passes with
SCCs in order to expose these analysis passes to the SCC passes. Making
this work is kind-of the whole point of the new pass manager. =]

So, when we're building SCCs for the call graph, we actually want to
build persistent nodes that stick around and can be reasoned about
later. We'd also like the ability to walk the SCC graph in more complex
ways than just the traditional postorder traversal of the current CGSCC
walk. That means that in addition to being persistent, the SCCs need to
be connected into a useful graph structure.

However, we still want the SCCs to be formed lazily where possible.

These constraints are quite hard to satisfy with the SCC iterator. Also,
using that would bypass our ability to actually add data to the nodes of
the call graph to facilite implementing the Tarjan walk. So I've
re-implemented things in a more direct and embedded way. This
immediately makes it easy to get the persistence and connectivity
correct, and it also allows leveraging the existing nodes to simplify
the algorithm. I've worked somewhat to make this implementation more
closely follow the traditional paper's nomenclature and strategy,
although it is still a bit obtuse because it isn't recursive, using
an explicit stack and a tail call instead, and it is interruptable,
resuming each time we need another SCC.

The other tricky bit here, and what actually took almost all the time
and trials and errors I spent building this, is exactly *what* graph
structure to build for the SCCs. The naive thing to build is the call
graph in its newly acyclic form. I wrote about 4 versions of this which
did precisely this. Inevitably, when I experimented with them across
various use cases, they became incredibly awkward. It was all
implementable, but it felt like a complete wrong fit. Square peg, round
hole. There were two overriding aspects that pushed me in a different
direction:

1) We want to discover the SCC graph in a postorder fashion. That means
   the root node will be the *last* node we find. Using the call-SCC DAG
   as the graph structure of the SCCs results in an orphaned graph until
   we discover a root.

2) We will eventually want to walk the SCC graph in parallel, exploring
   distinct sub-graphs independently, and synchronizing at merge points.
   This again is not helped by the call-SCC DAG structure.

The structure which, quite surprisingly, ended up being completely
natural to use is the *inverse* of the call-SCC DAG. We add the leaf
SCCs to the graph as "roots", and have edges to the caller SCCs. Once
I switched to building this structure, everything just fell into place
elegantly.

Aside from general cleanups (there are FIXMEs and too few comments
overall) that are still needed, the other missing piece of this is
support for iterating across levels of the SCC graph. These will become
useful for implementing #2, but they aren't an immediate priority.

Once SCCs are in good shape, I'll be working on adding mutation support
for incremental updates and adding the pass manager that this analysis
enables.

llvm-svn: 206581
2014-04-18 10:50:32 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith e576167df8 Revert "blockfreq: Rewrite BlockFrequencyInfoImpl"
This reverts commits r206548, r206549 and r206549.

There are some unit tests failing that aren't failing locally [1], so
reverting until I have time to investigate.

[1]: http://bb.pgr.jp/builders/ninja-x64-msvc-RA-centos6/builds/1816

llvm-svn: 206556
2014-04-18 02:17:43 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 878cf2b804 blockfreq: Really fix r206548 (and r206549)
Turns out this code is dead.

llvm-svn: 206554
2014-04-18 02:10:09 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith c7abca54cf blockfreq: Fixing MSVC after r206548?
llvm-svn: 206549
2014-04-18 02:06:24 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 12e68e1733 blockfreq: Rewrite BlockFrequencyInfoImpl
Rewrite the shared implementation of BlockFrequencyInfo and
MachineBlockFrequencyInfo entirely.

The old implementation had a fundamental flaw:  precision losses from
nested loops (or very wide branches) compounded past loop exits (and
convergence points).

The @nested_loops testcase at the end of
test/Analysis/BlockFrequencyAnalysis/basic.ll is motivating.  This
function has three nested loops, with branch weights in the loop headers
of 1:4000 (exit:continue).  The old analysis gives non-sensical results:

    Printing analysis 'Block Frequency Analysis' for function 'nested_loops':
    ---- Block Freqs ----
     entry = 1.0
     for.cond1.preheader = 1.00103
     for.cond4.preheader = 5.5222
     for.body6 = 18095.19995
     for.inc8 = 4.52264
     for.inc11 = 0.00109
     for.end13 = 0.0

The new analysis gives correct results:

    Printing analysis 'Block Frequency Analysis' for function 'nested_loops':
    block-frequency-info: nested_loops
     - entry: float = 1.0, int = 8
     - for.cond1.preheader: float = 4001.0, int = 32007
     - for.cond4.preheader: float = 16008001.0, int = 128064007
     - for.body6: float = 64048012001.0, int = 512384096007
     - for.inc8: float = 16008001.0, int = 128064007
     - for.inc11: float = 4001.0, int = 32007
     - for.end13: float = 1.0, int = 8

Most importantly, the frequency leaving each loop matches the frequency
entering it.

The new algorithm leverages BlockMass and PositiveFloat to maintain
precision, separates "probability mass distribution" from "loop
scaling", and uses dithering to eliminate probability mass loss.  I have
unit tests for these types out of tree, but it was decided in the review
to make the classes private to BlockFrequencyInfoImpl, and try to shrink
them (or remove them entirely) in follow-up commits.

The new algorithm should generally have a complexity advantage over the
old.  The previous algorithm was quadratic in the worst case.  The new
algorithm is still worst-case quadratic in the presence of irreducible
control flow, but it's linear without it.

The key difference between the old algorithm and the new is that control
flow within a loop is evaluated separately from control flow outside,
limiting propagation of precision problems and allowing loop scale to be
calculated independently of mass distribution.  Loops are visited
bottom-up, their loop scales are calculated, and they are replaced by
pseudo-nodes.  Mass is then distributed through the function, which is
now a DAG.  Finally, loops are revisited top-down to multiply through
the loop scales and the masses distributed to pseudo nodes.

There are some remaining flaws.

  - Irreducible control flow isn't modelled correctly.  LoopInfo and
    MachineLoopInfo ignore irreducible edges, so this algorithm will
    fail to scale accordingly.  There's a note in the class
    documentation about how to get closer.  See also the comments in
    test/Analysis/BlockFrequencyInfo/irreducible.ll.

  - Loop scale is limited to 4096 per loop (2^12) to avoid exhausting
    the 64-bit integer precision used downstream.

  - The "bias" calculation proposed on llvmdev is *not* incorporated
    here.  This will be added in a follow-up commit, once comments from
    this review have been handled.

llvm-svn: 206548
2014-04-18 01:57:45 +00:00
Nuno Lopes 9ced19abe8 remove some dead code
lib/Analysis/IPA/InlineCost.cpp         |   18 ------------------
 lib/Analysis/RegionPass.cpp             |    1 -
 lib/Analysis/TypeBasedAliasAnalysis.cpp |    1 -
 lib/Transforms/Scalar/LoopUnswitch.cpp  |   21 ---------------------
 lib/Transforms/Utils/LCSSA.cpp          |    2 --
 lib/Transforms/Utils/LoopSimplify.cpp   |    6 ------
 utils/TableGen/AsmWriterEmitter.cpp     |   13 -------------
 utils/TableGen/DFAPacketizerEmitter.cpp |    7 -------
 utils/TableGen/IntrinsicEmitter.cpp     |    2 --
 9 files changed, 71 deletions(-)

llvm-svn: 206506
2014-04-17 22:26:44 +00:00
Gerolf Hoflehner ecebc3730e Reverse 206485.
After some discussions the preferred semantics of
the always_inline attribute is
inline always when the compiler can determine
that it it safe to do so.

llvm-svn: 206487
2014-04-17 19:14:06 +00:00
Chandler Carruth b60cb315bc [LCG] Just move the allocator (now that we can) when moving a call
graph. This simplifies the custom move constructor operation to one of
walking the graph and updating the 'up' pointers to point to the new
location of the graph. Switch the nodes from a reference to a pointer
for the 'up' edge to facilitate this.

llvm-svn: 206450
2014-04-17 07:25:59 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 81f497d176 [LCG] Remove the Module reference member which we weren't using for
anything and doesn't make sense if assigning.

llvm-svn: 206449
2014-04-17 07:22:19 +00:00
Gerolf Hoflehner 5f6268a40e Inline a function when the always_inline attribute
is set even when it contains a indirect branch.
The attribute overrules correctness concerns
like the escape of a local block address.

This is for rdar://16501761

llvm-svn: 206429
2014-04-17 00:21:52 +00:00
Tobias Grosser 8d941ef30d RegionInfo: Do not access a value that was just moved away
This fixes a regression introduced in r206310.

llvm-svn: 206328
2014-04-15 22:09:36 +00:00
David Blaikie ec649acb82 Use unique_ptr to manage ownership of child Regions within llvm::Region
llvm-svn: 206310
2014-04-15 18:32:43 +00:00
Craig Topper 9f008867c0 [C++11] More 'nullptr' conversion. In some cases just using a boolean check instead of comparing to nullptr.
llvm-svn: 206243
2014-04-15 04:59:12 +00:00
Akira Hatanaka 5638b89944 Fix a bug in which BranchProbabilityInfo wasn't setting branch weights of basic blocks inside loops correctly.
Previously, BranchProbabilityInfo::calcLoopBranchHeuristics would determine the weights of basic blocks inside loops even when it didn't have enough information to estimate the branch probabilities correctly. This patch fixes the function to exit early if it doesn't see any exit edges or back edges and let the later heuristics determine the weights.

This fixes PR18705 and <rdar://problem/15991090>.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3363

llvm-svn: 206194
2014-04-14 16:56:19 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 689a50736e blockfreq: Rename BlockFrequencyImpl to BlockFrequencyInfoImpl
This is a shared implementation class for BlockFrequencyInfo and
MachineBlockFrequencyInfo, not for BlockFrequency, a related (but
distinct) class.

No functionality change.

<rdar://problem/14292693>

llvm-svn: 206083
2014-04-11 23:20:58 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 37bd529964 blockfreq: Use getSuccessorIndex()
No functionality change.

<rdar://problem/14292693>

llvm-svn: 206082
2014-04-11 23:20:52 +00:00
Tobias Grosser c3d9db2336 Delinearize: Extend informationin -analyze output
llvm-svn: 205838
2014-04-09 07:53:49 +00:00
Sebastian Pop b2fdacf3f2 divide by the result of the gcd
used to fail with 'Step should divide Start with no remainder.'

llvm-svn: 205802
2014-04-08 21:21:13 +00:00
Sebastian Pop 9738e83a7d handle special cases when findGCD returns 1
used to fail with 'Step should divide Start with no remainder.'

llvm-svn: 205801
2014-04-08 21:21:10 +00:00
Sebastian Pop b5b84e0963 in findGCD of multiply expr return the gcd
we used to return 1 instead of the gcd

llvm-svn: 205800
2014-04-08 21:21:05 +00:00
Eric Christopher beb2cd6b7c Handle vlas during inline cost computation if they'll be turned
into a constant size alloca by inlining.

Ran a run over the testsuite, no results out of the noise, fixes
the testcase in the PR.

PR19115.

llvm-svn: 205710
2014-04-07 13:36:21 +00:00
Hal Finkel b4e001cc81 Use TopTTI->getGEPCost from within getUserCost
The implementation of getUserCost had duplicated (and hard-coded) the default
logic in getGEPCost. Instead, it is better to use getGEPCost directly, which
limits the default logic to the implementation of one function, and allows
targets to override the behavior.

No functionality change intended.

llvm-svn: 205346
2014-04-01 18:50:06 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 1a444489e9 PR15967 Fix in basicaa for faulty returning no alias.
This commit consist of two parts.
The first part fix the PR15967. The wrong conclusion was made when the MaxLookup
limit was reached. The fix introduce a out parameter (MaxLookupReached) to
DecomposeGEPExpression that the function aliasGEP can act upon.
The second part is introducing the constant MaxLookupSearchDepth to make sure
that DecomposeGEPExpression and GetUnderlyingObject use the same search depth.
This is a small cleanup to clarify the original algorithm.

Patch by Karl-Johan Karlsson!

llvm-svn: 204859
2014-03-26 21:30:19 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 3dbe10503a blockfreq: Implement Pass::releaseMemory()
Implement Pass::releaseMemory() in BlockFrequencyInfo and
MachineBlockFrequencyInfo.  Just delete the private implementation when
not in use.  Switch to a std::unique_ptr to make the logic more clear.

<rdar://problem/14292693>

llvm-svn: 204741
2014-03-25 18:01:38 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer e75eaca32f ScalarEvolution: Compute exit counts for loops with a power-of-2 step.
If we have a loop of the form
for (unsigned n = 0; n != (k & -32); n += 32) {}
then we know that n is always divisible by 32 and the loop must
terminate. Even if we have a condition where the loop counter will
overflow it'll always hold this invariant.

PR19183. Our loop vectorizer creates this pattern and it's also
occasionally formed by loop counters derived from pointers.

llvm-svn: 204728
2014-03-25 16:25:12 +00:00
Erik Verbruggen e706b88304 Simplify loop that worked around bugs in old GCC/Xcode.
GCC 4.0.1 and Xcode 2 are no longer supported for building llvm/clang.

llvm-svn: 204705
2014-03-25 09:06:18 +00:00
Karthik Bhat 195e9dd91b Allow constant folding of ceil function whenever feasible
llvm-svn: 204583
2014-03-24 04:36:06 +00:00
Juergen Ributzka f0dff49ad0 [Constant Hoisting] Make the constant materialization cost operand dependent
Extend the target hook to take also the operand index into account when
calculating the cost of the constant materialization.

Related to <rdar://problem/16381500>

llvm-svn: 204435
2014-03-21 06:04:45 +00:00
Juergen Ributzka 46357931ab Revert "[Constant Hoisting] Extend coverage of the constant hoisting pass."
I will break this up into smaller pieces for review and recommit.

llvm-svn: 204393
2014-03-20 20:17:13 +00:00
Juergen Ributzka 6dab520c70 [Constant Hoisting] Extend coverage of the constant hoisting pass.
This commit extends the coverage of the constant hoisting pass, adds additonal
debug output and updates the function names according to the style guide.

Related to <rdar://problem/16381500>

llvm-svn: 204389
2014-03-20 19:55:52 +00:00
Michael Zolotukhin ed0a7761e5 Add stride normalization to SCEV Normalize/Denormalize transformation.
llvm-svn: 204161
2014-03-18 17:34:03 +00:00
Alon Mishne ad312155a6 [C++11] Change DebugInfoFinder to use range-based loops
Also changes the iterators to return actual DI type over MDNode.

llvm-svn: 204130
2014-03-18 09:41:07 +00:00
Eli Bendersky 576ef3c667 Consistent use of the noduplicate attribute.
The "noduplicate" attribute of call instructions is sometimes queried directly
and sometimes through the cannotDuplicate() predicate. This patch streamlines
all queries to use the cannotDuplicate() predicate. It also adds this predicate
to InvokeInst, to mirror what CallInst has.

llvm-svn: 204049
2014-03-17 16:19:07 +00:00
Arnaud A. de Grandmaison 75c9e6dedf Remove some dead assignements found by scan-build
llvm-svn: 204013
2014-03-15 22:13:15 +00:00
Michael Zolotukhin 66806aef1e PR17473:
Don't normalize an expression during postinc transformation unless it's
invertible.

llvm-svn: 203719
2014-03-12 21:31:05 +00:00
Michael Zolotukhin 15e6e543b9 Test commit
llvm-svn: 203716
2014-03-12 21:15:56 +00:00
Tim Northover e94a518a22 IR: add a second ordering operand to cmpxhg for failure
The syntax for "cmpxchg" should now look something like:

	cmpxchg i32* %addr, i32 42, i32 3 acquire monotonic

where the second ordering argument gives the required semantics in the case
that no exchange takes place. It should be no stronger than the first ordering
constraint and cannot be either "release" or "acq_rel" (since no store will
have taken place).

rdar://problem/15996804

llvm-svn: 203559
2014-03-11 10:48:52 +00:00
Chandler Carruth aee3ca6cfd [TTI] There is actually no realistic way to pop TTI implementations off
the stack of the analysis group because they are all immutable passes.
This is made clear by Craig's recent work to use override
systematically -- we weren't overriding anything for 'finalizePass'
because there is no such thing.

This is kind of a lame restriction on the API -- we can no longer push
and pop things, we just set up the stack and run. However, I'm not
invested in building some better solution on top of the existing
(terrifying) immutable pass and legacy pass manager.

llvm-svn: 203437
2014-03-10 02:45:14 +00:00
Chandler Carruth e9b50617b8 [LCG] Ran clang-format over this too and it pointed out some fixes.
llvm-svn: 203435
2014-03-10 02:14:14 +00:00
Chandler Carruth b9e2f8c479 [LCG] Simplify a bunch of the LCG code with range for loops and auto.
Still more work to be done here to leverage C++11, but this clears out
the glaring issues.

llvm-svn: 203395
2014-03-09 12:20:34 +00:00
Chandler Carruth cdf4788401 [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 03:16:01 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer b0f74b24fa [C++11] Convert sort predicates into lambdas.
No functionality change.

llvm-svn: 203288
2014-03-07 21:35:39 +00:00
Karthik Bhat b67688a87c Allow constant folding of round function whenever feasible
llvm-svn: 203198
2014-03-07 04:36:21 +00:00
Matt Arsenault a236ea551c Teach lint about address spaces
llvm-svn: 203132
2014-03-06 17:33:55 +00:00
Ahmed Charles 56440fd820 Replace OwningPtr<T> with std::unique_ptr<T>.
This compiles with no changes to clang/lld/lldb with MSVC and includes
overloads to various functions which are used by those projects and llvm
which have OwningPtr's as parameters. This should allow out of tree
projects some time to move. There are also no changes to libs/Target,
which should help out of tree targets have time to move, if necessary.

llvm-svn: 203083
2014-03-06 05:51:42 +00:00
Karthik Bhat daa8cd10d9 Allow constant folding of copysign
llvm-svn: 203076
2014-03-06 05:32:52 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 7da14f1ab9 [Layering] Move InstVisitor.h into the IR library as it is pretty
obviously coupled to the IR.

llvm-svn: 203064
2014-03-06 03:23:41 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 9a4c9e597b [Layering] Move DebugInfo.h into the IR library where its implementation
already lives.

llvm-svn: 203046
2014-03-06 00:46:21 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 061d147f74 ConstantFolding: Also fold the vector overloads of our math intrinsics.
llvm-svn: 202997
2014-03-05 19:41:48 +00:00
Tobias Grosser ba49e4229c Add missing parenthesis in SCEV comment
Contributed-by: Michael Zolutukin <mzolotukhin@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 202963
2014-03-05 10:37:17 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 64e9aa5c93 [C++11] Make this interface accept const Use pointers and use override
to ensure we don't mess up any of the overrides. Necessary for cleaning
up the Value use iterators and enabling range-based traversing of use
lists.

llvm-svn: 202958
2014-03-05 10:21:48 +00:00
Craig Topper e9ba759c81 [C++11] Add 'override' keyword to virtual methods that override their base class.
llvm-svn: 202945
2014-03-05 07:30:04 +00:00
Matt Arsenault 8377858c55 Allow constant folding of fma and fmuladd
llvm-svn: 202914
2014-03-05 00:02:00 +00:00
Matt Arsenault f8ecf9b447 Fix duplicate code in ConstantFolding
llvm-svn: 202913
2014-03-05 00:01:58 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 8cd041ef19 [Modules] Move the ConstantRange class into the IR library. This is
a bit surprising, as the class is almost entirely abstracted away from
any particular IR, however it encodes the comparsion predicates which
mutate ranges as ICmp predicate codes. This is reasonable as they're
used for both instructions and constants. Thus, it belongs in the IR
library with instructions and constants.

llvm-svn: 202838
2014-03-04 12:24:34 +00:00
Chandler Carruth aa0ab6389a [Modules] Move the PredIteratorCache into the IR library -- it is
hardcoded to use IR BasicBlocks.

llvm-svn: 202835
2014-03-04 12:09:19 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 1305dc3351 [Modules] Move CFG.h to the IR library as it defines graph traits over
IR types.

llvm-svn: 202827
2014-03-04 11:45:46 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 4220e9c154 [Modules] Move ValueHandle into the IR library where Value itself lives.
Move the test for this class into the IR unittests as well.

This uncovers that ValueMap too is in the IR library. Ironically, the
unittest for ValueMap is useless in the Support library (honestly, so
was the ValueHandle test) and so it already lives in the IR unittests.
Mmmm, tasty layering.

llvm-svn: 202821
2014-03-04 11:17:44 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 820a908df7 [Modules] Move the LLVM IR pattern match header into the IR library, it
obviously is coupled to the IR.

llvm-svn: 202818
2014-03-04 11:08:18 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 219b89b987 [Modules] Move CallSite into the IR library where it belogs. It is
abstracting between a CallInst and an InvokeInst, both of which are IR
concepts.

llvm-svn: 202816
2014-03-04 11:01:28 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 03eb0de93d [Modules] Move GetElementPtrTypeIterator into the IR library. As its
name might indicate, it is an iterator over the types in an instruction
in the IR.... You see where this is going.

Another step of modularizing the support library.

llvm-svn: 202815
2014-03-04 10:40:04 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 8394857f43 [Modules] Move InstIterator out of the Support library, where it had no
business.

This header includes Function and BasicBlock and directly uses the
interfaces of both classes. It has to do with the IR, it even has that
in the name. =] Put it in the library it belongs to.

This is one step toward making LLVM's Support library survive a C++
modules bootstrap.

llvm-svn: 202814
2014-03-04 10:30:26 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 442f784814 [cleanup] Re-sort all the includes with utils/sort_includes.py.
llvm-svn: 202811
2014-03-04 10:07:28 +00:00
Tobias Grosser 4abf9d3a54 [C++11] Add a basic block range view for RegionInfo
This also switches the users in LLVM to ensure this functionality is tested.

llvm-svn: 202705
2014-03-03 13:00:39 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 1583e99c23 [C++11] Add two range adaptor views to User: operands and
operand_values. The first provides a range view over operand Use
objects, and the second provides a range view over the Value*s being
used by those operands.

The naming is "STL-style" rather than "LLVM-style" because we have
historically named iterator methods STL-style, and range methods seem to
have far more in common with their iterator counterparts than with
"normal" APIs. Feel free to bikeshed on this one if you want, I'm happy
to change these around if people feel strongly.

I've switched code in SROA and LCG to exercise these mostly to ensure
they work correctly -- we don't really have an easy way to unittest this
and they're trivial.

llvm-svn: 202687
2014-03-03 10:42:58 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer d6f1f84f51 [C++11] Replace llvm::tie with std::tie.
The old implementation is no longer needed in C++11.

llvm-svn: 202644
2014-03-02 13:30:33 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer b6d0bd48bd [C++11] Replace llvm::next and llvm::prior with std::next and std::prev.
Remove the old functions.

llvm-svn: 202636
2014-03-02 12:27:27 +00:00
Craig Topper 73156025e0 Switch all uses of LLVM_OVERRIDE to just use 'override' directly.
llvm-svn: 202621
2014-03-02 09:09:27 +00:00
Craig Topper 77dfe45f81 Switch all uses of LLVM_FINAL to just use 'final', and remove the macro.
llvm-svn: 202618
2014-03-02 08:08:51 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 002da5db29 [C++11] Switch all uses of the llvm_move macro to use std::move
directly, and remove the macro.

llvm-svn: 202612
2014-03-02 04:08:41 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 172f7c37b9 [C++11] Remove the use of LLVM_HAS_RVALUE_REFERENCES from the rest of
the core LLVM libraries.

llvm-svn: 202582
2014-03-01 09:32:03 +00:00
Eric Christopher a13839f5ca Remove unnecessary llvm:: qualification.
llvm-svn: 202316
2014-02-26 23:27:16 +00:00
Paul Robinson 0c12b1d23c Constify the Optnone checks in IR passes.
llvm-svn: 202213
2014-02-26 01:23:26 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 339430f993 Use DataLayout from the module when easily available.
Eventually DataLayoutPass should go away, but for now that is the only easy
way to get a DataLayout in some APIs. This patch only changes the ones that
have easy access to a Module.

One interesting issue with sometimes using DataLayoutPass and sometimes
fetching it from the Module is that we have to make sure they are equivalent.
We can get most of the way there by always constructing the pass with a Module.
In fact, the pass could be changed to point to an external DataLayout instead
of owning one to make this stricter.

Unfortunately, the C api passes a DataLayout, so it has to be up to the caller
to make sure the pass and the module are in sync.

llvm-svn: 202204
2014-02-25 23:25:17 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 935125126c Make DataLayout a plain object, not a pass.
Instead, have a DataLayoutPass that holds one. This will allow parts of LLVM
don't don't handle passes to also use DataLayout.

llvm-svn: 202168
2014-02-25 17:30:31 +00:00
Rafael Espindola aeff8a9c05 Make some DataLayout pointers const.
No functionality change. Just reduces the noise of an upcoming patch.

llvm-svn: 202087
2014-02-24 23:12:18 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 90c7f1cc16 Replace the F_Binary flag with a F_Text one.
After this I will set the default back to F_None. The advantage is that
before this patch forgetting to set F_Binary would corrupt a file on windows.
Forgetting to set F_Text produces one that cannot be read in notepad, which
is a better failure mode :-)

llvm-svn: 202052
2014-02-24 18:20:12 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 7dbcdd08c2 Don't make F_None the default.
This will make it easier to switch the default to being binary files.

llvm-svn: 202042
2014-02-24 15:07:20 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 5f57f462a8 Rename a few more DataLayout variables from TD to DL.
llvm-svn: 201870
2014-02-21 18:34:28 +00:00
Sebastian Pop 64f12d5324 fix a corner case in delinearization
handle special cases Step==1, Step==-1, GCD==1, and GCD==-1

llvm-svn: 201868
2014-02-21 18:15:15 +00:00
Sebastian Pop 29026d3e52 normalize the last delinearized dimension
in the dependence test, we used to discard some information that the
delinearization provides: the size of the innermost dimension of an array,
i.e., the size of scalars stored in the array, and the remainder of the
delinearization that provides the offset from which the array reads start,
i.e., the base address of the array.

To avoid losing this data in the rest of the data dependence analysis, the fix
is to multiply the access function in the last delinearized dimension by its
size, effectively making the size of the last dimension to always be in bytes,
and then add the remainder of delinearization to the last subscript,
effectively making the last subscript start at the base address of the array.

llvm-svn: 201867
2014-02-21 18:15:11 +00:00
Sebastian Pop 5133d2e9d4 fail delinearization when the size of subscripts differs
Because the delinearization is not a global analysis pass, it will compute the
delinearization independently of knowledge about the way the delinearization
happened for other data accesses to the same array: the dependence analysis will
only trigger the delinearization on a tuple of access functions, and thus
delinearization may compute different subscripts sizes for a same array.  When
that happens the safest is to discard the delinearized information.

llvm-svn: 201866
2014-02-21 18:15:07 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 37dc9e19f5 Rename many DataLayout variables from TD to DL.
I am really sorry for the noise, but the current state where some parts of the
code use TD (from the old name: TargetData) and other parts use DL makes it
hard to write a patch that changes where those variables come from and how
they are passed along.

llvm-svn: 201827
2014-02-21 00:06:31 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 7c68bebb9c Rename some member variables from TD to DL.
TargetData was renamed DataLayout back in r165242.

llvm-svn: 201581
2014-02-18 15:33:12 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 26f567d8a4 SCEVExpander: Try hard not to create derived induction variables in other loops
During LSR of one loop we can run into a situation where we have to expand the
start of a recurrence of a loop induction variable in this loop. This start
value is a value derived of the induction variable of a preceeding loop. SCEV
has cannonicalized this value to a different recurrence than the recurrence of
the preceeding loop's induction variable (the type and/or step direction) has
changed). When we come to instantiate this SCEV we created a second induction
variable in this preceeding loop.  This patch tries to base such derived
induction variables of the preceeding loop's induction variable.

This helps twolf on arm and seems to help scimark2 on x86.

Reapply with a fix for the case of a value derived from a pointer.

radar://15970709

llvm-svn: 201496
2014-02-16 15:49:50 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 847d96142c Revert "SCEVExpander: Try hard not to create derived induction variables in other loops"
This reverts commit r201465. It broke an arm bot.

llvm-svn: 201466
2014-02-15 18:16:56 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 1e12f8563d SCEVExpander: Try hard not to create derived induction variables in other loops
During LSR of one loop we can run into a situation where we have to expand the
start of a recurrence of a loop induction variable in this loop. This start
value is a value derived of the induction variable of a preceeding loop. SCEV
has cannonicalized this value to a different recurrence than the recurrence of
the preceeding loop's induction variable (the type and/or step direction) has
changed). When we come to instantiate this SCEV we created a second induction
variable in this preceeding loop.  This patch tries to base such derived
induction variables of the preceeding loop's induction variable.

This helps twolf on arm and seems to help scimark2 on x86.

radar://15970709

llvm-svn: 201465
2014-02-15 17:11:56 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 989b92936c Reduce code duplication resulting from the ConstantVector/ConstantDataVector split.
No intended functionality change.

llvm-svn: 201344
2014-02-13 16:48:38 +00:00
Andrea Di Biagio b7882b3bd1 [Vectorizer] Add a new 'OperandValueKind' in TargetTransformInfo called
'OK_NonUniformConstValue' to identify operands which are constants but
not constant splats.

The cost model now allows returning 'OK_NonUniformConstValue'
for non splat operands that are instances of ConstantVector or
ConstantDataVector.

With this change, targets are now able to compute different costs
for instructions with non-uniform constant operands.
For example, On X86 the cost of a vector shift may vary depending on whether
the second operand is a uniform or non-uniform constant.

This patch applies the following changes:
 - The cost model computation now takes into account non-uniform constants;
 - The cost of vector shift instructions has been improved in
   X86TargetTransformInfo analysis pass;
 - BBVectorize, SLPVectorizer and LoopVectorize now know how to distinguish
   between non-uniform and uniform constant operands.

Added a new test to verify that the output of opt
'-cost-model -analyze' is valid in the following configurations: SSE2,
SSE4.1, AVX, AVX2.

llvm-svn: 201272
2014-02-12 23:43:47 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 987b850cf2 SCEV: Cast switched values to make -Wswitch more useful.
llvm-svn: 201170
2014-02-11 19:02:55 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 5a188549ad ScalarEvolution: Analyze trip count of loops with a switch guarding the exit.
llvm-svn: 201159
2014-02-11 15:44:32 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 3c29c0704b Make succ_iterator a real random access iterator and clean up a couple of users.
llvm-svn: 201088
2014-02-10 14:17:42 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer b8266d2062 GlobalsModRef: Unify and clean up duplicated pointer analysis code.
llvm-svn: 201087
2014-02-10 14:17:30 +00:00
Chandler Carruth d1ba2efb8f [PM] Fix horrible typos that somehow didn't cause a failure in a C++11
build but spectacularly changed behavior of the C++98 build. =]

This shows my one problem with not having unittests -- basic API
expectations aren't well exercised by the integration tests because they
*happen* to not come up, even though they might later. I'll probably add
a basic unittest to complement the integration testing later, but
I wanted to revive the bots.

llvm-svn: 200905
2014-02-06 05:17:02 +00:00
Chandler Carruth bf71a34eb9 [PM] Add a new "lazy" call graph analysis pass for the new pass manager.
The primary motivation for this pass is to separate the call graph
analysis used by the new pass manager's CGSCC pass management from the
existing call graph analysis pass. That analysis pass is (somewhat
unfortunately) over-constrained by the existing CallGraphSCCPassManager
requirements. Those requirements make it *really* hard to cleanly layer
the needed functionality for the new pass manager on top of the existing
analysis.

However, there are also a bunch of things that the pass manager would
specifically benefit from doing differently from the existing call graph
analysis, and this new implementation tries to address several of them:

- Be lazy about scanning function definitions. The existing pass eagerly
  scans the entire module to build the initial graph. This new pass is
  significantly more lazy, and I plan to push this even further to
  maximize locality during CGSCC walks.
- Don't use a single synthetic node to partition functions with an
  indirect call from functions whose address is taken. This node creates
  a huge choke-point which would preclude good parallelization across
  the fanout of the SCC graph when we got to the point of looking at
  such changes to LLVM.
- Use a memory dense and lightweight representation of the call graph
  rather than value handles and tracking call instructions. This will
  require explicit update calls instead of some updates working
  transparently, but should end up being significantly more efficient.
  The explicit update calls ended up being needed in many cases for the
  existing call graph so we don't really lose anything.
- Doesn't explicitly model SCCs and thus doesn't provide an "identity"
  for an SCC which is stable across updates. This is essential for the
  new pass manager to work correctly.
- Only form the graph necessary for traversing all of the functions in
  an SCC friendly order. This is a much simpler graph structure and
  should be more memory dense. It does limit the ways in which it is
  appropriate to use this analysis. I wish I had a better name than
  "call graph". I've commented extensively this aspect.

This is still very much a WIP, in fact it is really just the initial
bits. But it is about the fourth version of the initial bits that I've
implemented with each of the others running into really frustrating
problms. This looks like it will actually work and I'd like to split the
actual complexity across commits for the sake of my reviewers. =] The
rest of the implementation along with lots of wiring will follow
somewhat more rapidly now that there is a good path forward.

Naturally, this doesn't impact any of the existing optimizer. This code
is specific to the new pass manager.

A bunch of thanks are deserved for the various folks that have helped
with the design of this, especially Nick Lewycky who actually sat with
me to go through the fundamentals of the final version here.

llvm-svn: 200903
2014-02-06 04:37:03 +00:00
Paul Robinson af4e64d095 Disable most IR-level transform passes on functions marked 'optnone'.
Ideally only those transform passes that run at -O0 remain enabled,
in reality we get as close as we reasonably can.
Passes are responsible for disabling themselves, it's not the job of
the pass manager to do it for them.

llvm-svn: 200892
2014-02-06 00:07:05 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 8e661efc00 cleanup: scc_iterator consumers should use isAtEnd
No functional change.  Updated loops from:

    for (I = scc_begin(), E = scc_end(); I != E; ++I)

to:

    for (I = scc_begin(); !I.isAtEnd(); ++I)

for teh win.

llvm-svn: 200789
2014-02-04 19:19:07 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 6b4cc8b66a [inliner] Skip debug intrinsics even earlier in computing the inline
cost so that they don't impact the vector bonus. Fundamentally, counting
unsimplified instructions is just *wrong*; it will continue to introduce
instability as things which do not generate code bizarrely impact
inlining. For example, sufficiently nested inlined functions could turn
off the vector bonus with lifetime markers just like the debug
intrinsics do. =/

This is a short-term tactical fix. Long term, I think we need to remove
the vector bonus entirely. That's a separate patch and discussion
though.

The patch to fix this provided by Dario Domizioli. I've added some
comments about the planned direction and used a heavily pruned form of
debug info intrinsics for the test case. While this debug info doesn't
work or "do" anything useful, it lets us easily test all manner of
interference easily, and I suspect this will not be the last time we
want to craft a pattern where debug info interferes with the inliner in
a problematic way.

llvm-svn: 200609
2014-02-01 10:38:17 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 394e34f5c2 [inliner] Print out extra stats about the cost, threshold, and vector
bonus in the inline cost analysis.

Split out of a patch by Dario Domizioli to commit separately.

llvm-svn: 200586
2014-01-31 22:32:32 +00:00
Matt Arsenault ee364ee729 Allow speculating llvm.sqrt, fma and fmuladd
This doesn't set errno, so this should be OK.
Also update the documentation to explicitly state
that errno are not set.

llvm-svn: 200501
2014-01-31 00:09:00 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 26af2cae05 Update optimization passes to handle inalloca arguments
Summary:
I searched Transforms/ and Analysis/ for 'ByVal' and updated those call
sites to check for inalloca if appropriate.

I added tests for any change that would allow an optimization to fire on
inalloca.

Reviewers: nlewycky

Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2449

llvm-svn: 200281
2014-01-28 02:38:36 +00:00
Nick Lewycky 629199ccb3 Fix crasher introduced in r200203 and caught by a libc++ buildbot. Don't assume that getMulExpr returns a SCEVMulExpr, it may have simplified it to something else!
llvm-svn: 200210
2014-01-27 10:47:44 +00:00
Nick Lewycky 31eaca5513 Teach SCEV to handle more cases of 'and X, CST', specifically where CST is any number of contiguous 1 bits in a row, with any number of leading and trailing 0 bits.
Unfortunately, this in turn led to some lower quality SCEVs due to some different paths through expression simplification, so add getUDivExactExpr and use it. This fixes all instances of the problems that I found, but we can make that function smarter as necessary.

Merge test "xor-and.ll" into "and-xor.ll" since I needed to update it anyways. Test 'nsw-offset.ll' analyzes a little deeper, %n now gets a scev in terms of %no instead of a SCEVUnknown.

llvm-svn: 200203
2014-01-27 10:04:03 +00:00
Juergen Ributzka f26beda7c7 Revert "Revert "Add Constant Hoisting Pass" (r200034)"
This reverts commit r200058 and adds the using directive for
ARMTargetTransformInfo to silence two g++ overload warnings.

llvm-svn: 200062
2014-01-25 02:02:55 +00:00
Hans Wennborg 4d67a2e85a Revert "Add Constant Hoisting Pass" (r200034)
This commit caused -Woverloaded-virtual warnings. The two new
TargetTransformInfo::getIntImmCost functions were only added to the superclass,
and to the X86 subclass. The other targets were not updated, and the
warning highlighted this by pointing out that e.g. ARMTTI::getIntImmCost was
hiding the two new getIntImmCost variants.

We could pacify the warning by adding "using TargetTransformInfo::getIntImmCost"
to the various subclasses, or turning it off, but I suspect that it's wrong to
leave the functions unimplemnted in those targets. The default implementations
return TCC_Free, which I don't think is right e.g. for ARM.

llvm-svn: 200058
2014-01-25 01:18:18 +00:00
Juergen Ributzka 4f3df4ad64 Add Constant Hoisting Pass
Retry commit r200022 with a fix for the build bot errors. Constant expressions
have (unlike instructions) module scope use lists and therefore may have users
in different functions. The fix is to simply ignore these out-of-function uses.

llvm-svn: 200034
2014-01-24 20:18:00 +00:00
Juergen Ributzka 50e7e80d00 Revert "Add Constant Hoisting Pass"
This reverts commit r200022 to unbreak the build bots.

llvm-svn: 200024
2014-01-24 18:40:30 +00:00
Juergen Ributzka 38b67d0caf Add Constant Hoisting Pass
This pass identifies expensive constants to hoist and coalesces them to
better prepare it for SelectionDAG-based code generation. This works around the
limitations of the basic-block-at-a-time approach.

First it scans all instructions for integer constants and calculates its
cost. If the constant can be folded into the instruction (the cost is
TCC_Free) or the cost is just a simple operation (TCC_BASIC), then we don't
consider it expensive and leave it alone. This is the default behavior and
the default implementation of getIntImmCost will always return TCC_Free.

If the cost is more than TCC_BASIC, then the integer constant can't be folded
into the instruction and it might be beneficial to hoist the constant.
Similar constants are coalesced to reduce register pressure and
materialization code.

When a constant is hoisted, it is also hidden behind a bitcast to force it to
be live-out of the basic block. Otherwise the constant would be just
duplicated and each basic block would have its own copy in the SelectionDAG.
The SelectionDAG recognizes such constants as opaque and doesn't perform
certain transformations on them, which would create a new expensive constant.

This optimization is only applied to integer constants in instructions and
simple (this means not nested) constant cast experessions. For example:
%0 = load i64* inttoptr (i64 big_constant to i64*)

Reviewed by Eric

llvm-svn: 200022
2014-01-24 18:23:08 +00:00
Juergen Ributzka 3e752e7af9 Add final and owerride keywords to TargetTransformInfo's subclasses.
llvm-svn: 200021
2014-01-24 18:22:59 +00:00
Alp Toker cb40291100 Fix known typos
Sweep the codebase for common typos. Includes some changes to visible function
names that were misspelt.

llvm-svn: 200018
2014-01-24 17:20:08 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 5e1794eedb InstSimplify: Make shift, select and GEP simplifications vector-aware.
llvm-svn: 200016
2014-01-24 17:09:53 +00:00
Matt Arsenault 339506d151 Get right cost for addrspacecast in cost model
llvm-svn: 199833
2014-01-22 20:30:16 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 043949d446 [PM] Make the verifier work independently of any pass manager.
This makes the 'verifyFunction' and 'verifyModule' functions totally
independent operations on the LLVM IR. It also cleans up their API a bit
by lifting the abort behavior into their clients and just using an
optional raw_ostream parameter to control printing.

The implementation of the verifier is now just an InstVisitor with no
multiple inheritance. It also is significantly more const-correct, and
hides the const violations internally. The two layers that force us to
break const correctness are building a DomTree and dispatching through
the InstVisitor.

A new VerifierPass is used to implement the legacy pass manager
interface in terms of the other pieces.

The error messages produced may be slightly different now, and we may
have slightly different short circuiting behavior with different usage
models of the verifier, but generally everything works equivalently and
this unblocks wiring the verifier up to the new pass manager.

llvm-svn: 199569
2014-01-19 02:22:18 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer e3ac099726 BasicAA: We need to check both access sizes when comparing a gep and an
underlying object of unknown size.

Fixes PR18460.

llvm-svn: 199351
2014-01-16 04:53:18 +00:00
Andrew Trick ee5aa7f71a Fix PR18449: SCEV needs more precise max BECount for multi-exit loop.
llvm-svn: 199299
2014-01-15 06:42:11 +00:00
Matt Arsenault e55a2c2e6b Make nocapture analysis work with addrspacecast
llvm-svn: 199246
2014-01-14 19:11:52 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 73523021d0 [PM] Split DominatorTree into a concrete analysis result object which
can be used by both the new pass manager and the old.

This removes it from any of the virtual mess of the pass interfaces and
lets it derive cleanly from the DominatorTreeBase<> template. In turn,
tons of boilerplate interface can be nuked and it turns into a very
straightforward extension of the base DominatorTree interface.

The old analysis pass is now a simple wrapper. The names and style of
this split should match the split between CallGraph and
CallGraphWrapperPass. All of the users of DominatorTree have been
updated to match using many of the same tricks as with CallGraph. The
goal is that the common type remains the resulting DominatorTree rather
than the pass. This will make subsequent work toward the new pass
manager significantly easier.

Also in numerous places things became cleaner because I switched from
re-running the pass (!!! mid way through some other passes run!!!) to
directly recomputing the domtree.

llvm-svn: 199104
2014-01-13 13:07:17 +00:00
Chandler Carruth e509db410a [PM] Pull the generic graph algorithms and data structures for dominator
trees into the Support library.

These are all expressed in terms of the generic GraphTraits and CFG,
with no reliance on any concrete IR types. Putting them in support
clarifies that and makes the fact that the static analyzer in Clang uses
them much more sane. When moving the Dominators.h file into the IR
library I claimed that this was the right home for it but not something
I planned to work on. Oops.

So why am I doing this? It happens to be one step toward breaking the
requirement that IR verification can only be performed from inside of
a pass context, which completely blocks the implementation of
verification for the new pass manager infrastructure. Fixing it will
also allow removing the concept of the "preverify" step (WTF???) and
allow the verifier to cleanly flag functions which fail verification in
a way that precludes even computing dominance information. Currently,
that results in a fatal error even when you ask the verifier to not
fatally error. It's awesome like that.

The yak shaving will continue...

llvm-svn: 199095
2014-01-13 10:52:56 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 5ad5f15cff [cleanup] Move the Dominators.h and Verifier.h headers into the IR
directory. These passes are already defined in the IR library, and it
doesn't make any sense to have the headers in Analysis.

Long term, I think there is going to be a much better way to divide
these matters. The dominators code should be fully separated into the
abstract graph algorithm and have that put in Support where it becomes
obvious that evn Clang's CFGBlock's can use it. Then the verifier can
manually construct dominance information from the Support-driven
interface while the Analysis library can provide a pass which both
caches, reconstructs, and supports a nice update API.

But those are very long term, and so I don't want to leave the really
confusing structure until that day arrives.

llvm-svn: 199082
2014-01-13 09:26:24 +00:00
Chandler Carruth b8ddc7043c [PM] Rename the IR printing pass header to a more generic and correct
name to match the source file which I got earlier. Update the include
sites. Also modernize the comments in the header to use the more
recommended doxygen style.

llvm-svn: 199041
2014-01-12 11:10:32 +00:00
Stepan Dyatkovskiy 431993b57b Fixed old typo in ScalarEvolution, that caused wrong SCEVs zext operation.
Detailed description is here:
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=18000#c16

For participation in bugfix process special thanks to David Wiberg.

llvm-svn: 198863
2014-01-09 12:26:12 +00:00
Chandler Carruth d48cdbf0c3 Put the functionality for printing a value to a raw_ostream as an
operand into the Value interface just like the core print method is.
That gives a more conistent organization to the IR printing interfaces
-- they are all attached to the IR objects themselves. Also, update all
the users.

This removes the 'Writer.h' header which contained only a single function
declaration.

llvm-svn: 198836
2014-01-09 02:29:41 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 9aca918df9 Move the LLVM IR asm writer header files into the IR directory, as they
are part of the core IR library in order to support dumping and other
basic functionality.

Rename the 'Assembly' include directory to 'AsmParser' to match the
library name and the only functionality left their -- printing has been
in the core IR library for quite some time.

Update all of the #includes to match.

All of this started because I wanted to have the layering in good shape
before I started adding support for printing LLVM IR using the new pass
infrastructure, and commandline support for the new pass infrastructure.

llvm-svn: 198688
2014-01-07 12:34:26 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 8a8cd2bab9 Re-sort all of the includes with ./utils/sort_includes.py so that
subsequent changes are easier to review. About to fix some layering
issues, and wanted to separate out the necessary churn.

Also comment and sink the include of "Windows.h" in three .inc files to
match the usage in Memory.inc.

llvm-svn: 198685
2014-01-07 11:48:04 +00:00
Mingjie Xing 9deac1b7c2 Fix comment of findGCD.
llvm-svn: 198660
2014-01-07 01:54:16 +00:00
Chandler Carruth c4ddab6ff2 [PM] Add a definition for the static PassID in the CallGraphAnalysis.
Missed this when adding the skeleton analysis. Caught by a build break
in the next patch I'm working on when trying to use the analysis.

llvm-svn: 198556
2014-01-05 10:38:52 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 833a82ecde BasicAA: Use reachabilty instead of dominance for checking value equality in phi
cycles

This allows the value equality check to work even if we don't have a dominator
tree. Also add some more comments.

I was worried about compile time impacts and did not implement reachability but
used the dominance check in the initial patch. The trade-off was that the
dominator tree was required.
The llvm utility function isPotentiallyReachable cuts off the recursive search
after 32 visits. Testing did not show any compile time regressions showing my
worries unjustfied.

No compile time or performance regressions at O3 -flto -mavx on test-suite +
externals.

Addresses review comments from r198290.

llvm-svn: 198400
2014-01-03 05:47:03 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 0d10a9d579 BasicAA: Fix value equality and phi cycles
When there are cycles in the value graph we have to be careful interpreting
"Value*" identity as "value" equivalence. We interpret the value of a phi node
as the value of its operands.
When we check for value equivalence now we make sure that the "Value*" dominates
all cycles (phis).

%0 = phi [%noaliasval, %addr2]
%l = load %ptr
%addr1 = gep @a, 0, %l
%addr2 = gep @a, 0, (%l + 1)
store %ptr ...

Before this patch we would return NoAlias for (%0, %addr1) which is wrong
because the value of the load is from different iterations of the loop.

Tested on x86_64 -mavx at O3 and O3 -flto with no performance or compile time
regressions.

PR18068
radar://15653794

llvm-svn: 198290
2014-01-02 03:31:36 +00:00
Yuchen Wu 5947c8fa99 BlockFrequencyInfo: Readded getEntryFreq.
llvm-svn: 197839
2013-12-20 22:11:11 +00:00
Michael Gottesman fb9164f0d2 [block-freq] Teach branch probability how to return the edge weight in between a BasicBlock and one of its successors.
IMHO At some point BasicBlock should be refactored along the lines of
MachineBasicBlock so that successors/weights are actually embedded within the
block. Now is not that time though.

llvm-svn: 197303
2013-12-14 02:24:25 +00:00
Matt Arsenault d3ee7af2f4 Teach MemoryBuiltins about address spaces
llvm-svn: 197292
2013-12-14 00:27:48 +00:00
Michael Gottesman b0c1ed8f4c [block-freq] Update BlockFrequencyInfo/MachineBlockFrequencyInfo to use the new print methods.
llvm-svn: 197289
2013-12-14 00:25:42 +00:00
Michael Gottesman fd5c4b2c09 [block-freq] Add the equivalent methods to MachineBlockFrequencyInfo and BlockFrequencyInfo that were added to BlockFrequencyImpl in r197285 and r197284.
llvm-svn: 197287
2013-12-14 00:06:03 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 37d25de459 [inliner] Fix PR18206 by preventing inlining functions that call setjmp
through an invoke instruction.

The original patch for this was written by Mark Seaborn, but I've
reworked his test case into the existing returns_twice test case and
implemented the fix by the prior refactoring to actually run the cost
analysis over invoke instructions, and then here fixing our detection of
the returns_twice attribute to work for both calls and invokes. We never
noticed because we never saw an invoke. =[

llvm-svn: 197216
2013-12-13 08:00:01 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 0814d2adf0 [inliner] Completely change (and fix) how the inline cost analysis
handles terminator instructions.

The inline cost analysis inheritted some pretty rough handling of
terminator insts from the original cost analysis, and then made it much,
much worse by factoring all of the important analyses into a separate
instruction visitor. That instruction visitor never visited the
terminator.

This works fine for things like conditional branches, but for many other
things we simply computed The Wrong Value. First example are
unconditional branches, which should be free but were counted as full
cost. This is most significant for conditional branches where the
condition simplifies and folds during inlining. We paid a 1 instruction
tax on every branch in a straight line specialized path. =[

Oh, we also claimed that the unreachable instruction had cost.

But it gets worse. Let's consider invoke. We never applied the call
penalty. We never accounted for the cost of the arguments. Nope. Worse
still, we didn't handle the *correctness* constraints of not inlining
recursive invokes, or exception throwing returns_twice functions. Oops.
See PR18206. Sadly, PR18206 requires yet another fix, but this
refactoring is at least a huge step in that direction.

llvm-svn: 197215
2013-12-13 07:59:56 +00:00
Chandler Carruth cb5beb347a [cleanup] Remove trailing whitespace before I start changing this file.
llvm-svn: 197149
2013-12-12 11:59:26 +00:00
Jakub Staszak 3ab283c157 Don't #include heavy Dominators.h file in LoopInfo.h. This change reduces
overall time of LLVM compilation by ~1%.

llvm-svn: 196667
2013-12-07 21:20:17 +00:00
Alp Toker f907b891da Correct word hyphenations
This patch tries to avoid unrelated changes other than fixing a few
hyphen-related ambiguities and contractions in nearby lines.

llvm-svn: 196471
2013-12-05 05:44:44 +00:00
Eric Christopher 67c0bfeae8 Fix typo.
llvm-svn: 196434
2013-12-04 23:55:09 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 6378cf539f [PM] Split the CallGraph out from the ModulePass which creates the
CallGraph.

This makes the CallGraph a totally generic analysis object that is the
container for the graph data structure and the primary interface for
querying and manipulating it. The pass logic is separated into its own
class. For compatibility reasons, the pass provides wrapper methods for
most of the methods on CallGraph -- they all just forward.

This will allow the new pass manager infrastructure to provide its own
analysis pass that constructs the same CallGraph object and makes it
available. The idea is that in the new pass manager, the analysis pass's
'run' method returns a concrete analysis 'result'. Here, that result is
a 'CallGraph'. The 'run' method will typically do only minimal work,
deferring much of the work into the implementation of the result object
in order to be lazy about computing things, but when (like DomTree)
there is *some* up-front computation, the analysis does it prior to
handing the result back to the querying pass.

I know some of this is fairly ugly. I'm happy to change it around if
folks can suggest a cleaner interim state, but there is going to be some
amount of unavoidable ugliness during the transition period. The good
thing is that this is very limited and will naturally go away when the
old pass infrastructure goes away. It won't hang around to bother us
later.

Next up is the initial new-PM-style call graph analysis. =]

llvm-svn: 195722
2013-11-26 04:19:30 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 878b55372a [PM] Reformat some code with clang-format as I'm going to be editting as
part of generalizing the call graph infrastructure for the new pass
manager.

llvm-svn: 195718
2013-11-26 03:45:26 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 9a398f453d [PM] Rename the 'Mod' member to the more idiomatic 'M'. No functionality
changed.

llvm-svn: 195701
2013-11-26 00:37:23 +00:00
Kostya Serebryany 0b458286e1 Don't speculate loads under ThreadSanitizer
Summary:
Don't speculate loads under ThreadSanitizer.
This fixes https://code.google.com/p/thread-sanitizer/issues/detail?id=40
Also discussed here: http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvmdev/2013-November/067929.html

Reviewers: chandlerc

Reviewed By: chandlerc

CC: llvm-commits, dvyukov

Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2227

llvm-svn: 195324
2013-11-21 07:29:28 +00:00
Paul Robinson dcbe35bad5 The 'optnone' attribute means don't inline anything into this function
(except functions marked always_inline).
Functions with 'optnone' must also have 'noinline' so they don't get
inlined into any other function.

Based on work by Andrea Di Biagio.

llvm-svn: 195046
2013-11-18 21:44:03 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 5f2768c377 Annotate APInt methods where it's not clear whether they are in place with warn_unused_result.
Fix ScalarEvolution bugs uncovered by this.

llvm-svn: 194928
2013-11-16 16:25:41 +00:00
Matt Arsenault a8fe22baba Use correct size for address space in BasicAA.
The tests just hit this with a different sized
address space since I haven't figured out how
to use this to break it.

I thought I committed this a long time ago,
and I'm not sure why missing this hasn't caused
any problems.

llvm-svn: 194903
2013-11-16 00:36:43 +00:00
Matt Arsenault b03bd4d96b Add addrspacecast instruction.
Patch by Michele Scandale!

llvm-svn: 194760
2013-11-15 01:34:59 +00:00
Michael Gottesman fd8aee76eb Added BlockFrequencyInfo::view for displaying the block frequency propagation graph via graphviz.
This is useful for debugging issues in the BlockFrequency implementation since
one can easily visualize where probability mass and other errors occur in the
propagation.

llvm-svn: 194654
2013-11-14 02:27:46 +00:00
Yunzhong Gao 5cbcf56a7e Fixing a heisenbug where the memory dependence analysis behaves differently
with and without -g.

Adding a test case to make sure that the threshold used in the memory
dependence analysis is respected. The test case also checks that debug
intrinsics are not counted towards this threshold.

Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2141

llvm-svn: 194646
2013-11-14 01:10:52 +00:00
Michael Gottesman 857d6e3dd1 Fixed 80+ violations.
llvm-svn: 194634
2013-11-14 00:05:07 +00:00
Sebastian Pop 7ee147246f add more comments around the delinearization of arrays
llvm-svn: 194612
2013-11-13 22:37:58 +00:00
Jakub Staszak 9dca4b3eeb Simplify code. No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 194602
2013-11-13 20:18:38 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 9e501ec239 Move Delinearization pass into an anonymous namespace.
llvm-svn: 194582
2013-11-13 15:35:17 +00:00
Sebastian Pop c62c679c1b delinearization of arrays
llvm-svn: 194527
2013-11-12 22:47:20 +00:00
Wan Xiaofei b2c8cdc766 Change data structure to memorize computed result in ScalarEvolution
Replace std::map with SmallVector to memorize the cached result since SCEV usually belongs to little Loop/BB
Linear scan on SmallVector is faster than std::map.

Code reviewer : Andrew Trick.
Test result   : Pass Unit Test & LLVM Test Suite

401.bzip2	0.425721	0.419981	101.37%
403.gcc		24.53855	24.2667		101.12%
429.mcf		0.060847	0.059944	101.51%
433.milc	0.646009	0.636119	101.55%
444.namd	1.383928	1.370614	100.97%
445.gobmk	5.836575	5.800225	100.63%
450.soplex	1.911257	1.895963	100.81%
456.hmmer	1.039565	1.032534	100.68%
458.sjeng	0.897401	0.885567	101.34%
464.h264ref	3.645908	3.577991	101.90%
470.lbm		0.049456	0.048398	102.19%
471.omnetpp	5.638575	5.60435		100.61%
bitmnp01	0.045738	0.045291	100.99%
cjpegv2data	0.304359	0.302833	100.50%
idctrn01	0.046433	0.045763	101.46%
quake2		4.534416	4.4952		100.87%
quake		2.688566	2.659208	101.10%
xcsoar		12.42545	12.30385	100.99%
linpack		0.038739	0.03803		101.86%
matrix01	0.053564	0.0528		101.45%
nbench		0.402867	0.395803	101.78%
tblook01	0.021265	0.021015	101.19%
ttsprk01	0.066384	0.065566	101.25%

llvm-svn: 194459
2013-11-12 09:40:41 +00:00
Matt Arsenault b12f2f3b60 Use size function instead of manually calculating it.
llvm-svn: 194345
2013-11-10 03:18:50 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 7caea41545 Move the old pass manager infrastructure into a legacy namespace and
give the files a legacy prefix in the right directory. Use forwarding
headers in the old locations to paper over the name change for most
clients during the transitional period.

No functionality changed here! This is just clearing some space to
reduce renaming churn later on with a new system.

Even when the new stuff starts to go in, it is going to be hidden behind
a flag and off-by-default as it is still WIP and under development.

This patch is specifically designed so that very little out-of-tree code
has to change. I'm going to work as hard as I can to keep that the case.
Only direct forward declarations of the PassManager class are impacted
by this change.

llvm-svn: 194324
2013-11-09 12:26:54 +00:00
Andrew Trick 34e2f0c4ea Rewrite SCEV's backedge taken count computation.
Patch by Michele Scandale!

Rewrite of the functions used to compute the backedge taken count of a
loop on LT and GT comparisons.

I decided to split the handling of LT and GT cases becasue the trick
"a > b == -a < -b" in some cases prevents the trip count computation
due to the multiplication by -1 on the two operands of the
comparison. This issue comes from the conservative computation of
value range of SCEVs: taking the negative SCEV of an expression that
have a small positive range (e.g. [0,31]), we would have a SCEV with a
fullset as value range.

Indeed, in the new rewritten function I tried to better handle the
maximum backedge taken count computation when MAX/MIN expression are
used to handle the cases where no entry guard is found.

Some test have been modified in order to check the new value correctly
(I manually check them and reasoning on possible overflow the new
values seem correct).

I finally added a new test case related to the multiplication by -1
issue on GT comparisons.

llvm-svn: 194116
2013-11-06 02:08:26 +00:00
Matt Arsenault a8e894405c Fix another constant folding address space place I missed.
This fixes an assertion failure with a different sized address space.

llvm-svn: 194014
2013-11-04 20:46:52 +00:00
Hal Finkel 4d94930bcb Consider (x == -1) unlikely in BranchProbabilityInfo
This adds another heuristic to BPI, similar to the existing heuristic that
considers (x == 0) unlikely to be true. As suggested in the PACT'98 paper by
Deitrich, Cheng, and Hwu, -1 is often used to indicate an invalid index, and
equality comparisons with -1 are also unlikely to succeed. Local
experimentation supports this hypothesis: This yields a 1-2% speedup in the
test-suite sqlite benchmark on the PPC A2 core, with no significant
regressions.

llvm-svn: 193855
2013-11-01 10:58:22 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 6554e5a94d Merge CallGraph and BasicCallGraph.
llvm-svn: 193734
2013-10-31 03:03:55 +00:00