For use in an uncoming patch. Left out the phi case (which could otherwise fit in this framework) as it would cause infinite recursion in said patch. We can probably also leverage this in instcombine to ensure we keep the two sets of related analysis and transforms in sync.
Even if one of the operands is overdefined, we may still produce
a non-overdefined result, e.g. due to a min/max operation. This
matches our handling elsewhere, e.g. for binary operators.
The slot poisoning comment refers to a much older LVI cache
implementation.
This was prompted by D95727, which had the side-effect to break the
'release' mode build bot for ML-driven policies. The problem is that now
the pre-compiled object files don't get transitively carried through as
'source' anymore; that being said, the previous way of consuming them
was problematic, because it was only working for static builds; in
dynamic builds, the whole tf_xla_runtime was linked, which is
undesirable.
The alternative is to treat tf_xla_runtime as an archive, which then
leads to the desired effect.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99829
InstCombine performs simple forwarding from stores to loads, but
currently only handles the case where the load and store have the
same size. This extends it to also handle a store of a constant
with a larger size followed by a load with a smaller size.
This is implemented through ConstantFoldLoadThroughBitcast() which
is fairly primitive (e.g. does not allow storing a large integer
and then loading a small one), but at least can forward the first
element of a vector store. Unfortunately it seems that we currently
don't have a generic helper for "read a constant value as a different
type", it's all tangled up with other logic in either
ConstantFolding or VNCoercion.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98114
The AAMDNodes part of the MemoryLocation is not used by the BasicAA
cache, so don't store it. This reduces the size of each cache entry
from 112 bytes to 48 bytes.
BasicAA itself doesn't make use of AA metadata, but passes it
through to recursive queries and makes it part of the cache key.
Aliasing decisions that are based on AA metadata (i.e. TBAA and
ScopedAA) are based *only* on AA metadata, so checking them with
different pointer values or sizes is not useful, the result will
always be the same.
While this change is a mild compile-time improvement by itself,
the actual goal here is to reduce the size of AA cache keys in
a followup change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90098
In order to bring up scalable vector support in LLVM incrementally,
we introduced behaviour to emit a warning, instead of an error, when
asking the wrong question of a scalable vector, like asking for the
fixed number of elements.
This patch puts that behaviour under a flag. The default behaviour is
that the compiler will always error, which means that all LLVM unit
tests and regression tests will now fail when a code-path is taken that
still uses the wrong interface.
The behaviour to demote an error to a warning can be individually enabled
for tools that want to support experimental use of scalable vectors.
This patch enables that behaviour when driving compilation from Clang.
This means that for users who want to try out scalable-vector support,
fixed-width codegen support, or build user-code with scalable vector
intrinsics, Clang will not crash and burn when the compiler encounters
such a case.
This allows us to do away with the following pattern in many of the SVE tests:
RUN: .... 2>%t
RUN: cat %t | FileCheck --check-prefix=WARN
WARN-NOT: warning: ...
The behaviour to emit warnings is only temporary and we expect this flag
to be removed in the future when scalable vector support is more stable.
This patch also has fixes the following tests:
unittests:
ScalableVectorMVTsTest.SizeQueries
SelectionDAGAddressAnalysisTest.unknownSizeFrameObjects
AArch64SelectionDAGTest.computeKnownBitsSVE_ZERO_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG
regression tests:
Transforms/InstCombine/vscale_gep.ll
Reviewed By: paulwalker-arm, ctetreau
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98856
Hookup TLI when inferring object size from allocation calls. This allows the analysis to prove dereferenceability for known allocation functions (such as malloc/new/etc) in addition to those marked explicitly with the allocsize attribute.
This is a follow up to 0129cd5 now that the bug fixed by e2c6621e6 is resolved.
As noted in the test, this relies on being able to prove that there is no free between allocation and context (e.g. hoist location). At the moment, this is handled conservatively. I'm working strengthening out ability to reason about no-free regions separately.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99737
We have this logic duplicated in several cases, none of which were exhaustive. Consolidate it in one place.
I don't believe this actually impacts behavior of the callers. I think they all filter their inputs such that their partial implementations were correct. If not, this might be fixing a cornercase bug.
Support deriving dereferenceability facts from allocation sites with known object sizes while correctly accounting for any possibly frees between allocation and use site. (At the moment, we're conservative and only allowing it in functions where we know we can't free.)
This is part of the work on deref-at-point semantics. I'm making the change unconditional as the miscompile in this case is way too easy to trip by accident, and the optimization was only recently added (by me).
There will be a follow up patch wiring through TLI since that should now be doable without introducing widespread miscompiles.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95815
This is a patch teaching ValueTracking that `s/u*.with.overflow` intrinsics do not
create undef/poison and they propagate poison.
I couldn't write a nice example like the one with ctpop; ValueTrackingTest.cpp were simply updated
to check these instead.
This patch helps reducing regression while fixing https://llvm.org/pr49688 .
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99671
This fixes an issue introduced with my change d4648e, and reported in pr49768.
The root problem is that dominance collapses in unreachable code, and that LoopInfo explicitly only models reachable code. Since the recurrence matcher doesn't filter by reachability (and can't easily because not all consumers have domtree), we need to bailout before assuming that finding a recurrence implies we found a loop.
Attempts to compute savings more accurately cannot impact the set of critically important call sites.
Reviewed By: kazu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98577
We previously made a change to getUserCost to return a Invalid cost
when one of the TTI costs returned '-1' (meaning 'unknown' or
'infinitely expensive'). It makes no sense to say that:
shufflevector <2 x i8> %x, <2 x i8> %y, <4 x i32> <i32 0, i32 1, i32 2, i32 3>
has an invalid cost. Perhaps the cost is not known, but the IR is valid
and can be code-generated. Invalid should only be used for IR that
cannot possibly be code-generated and where a cost is nonsensical.
With more passes now asserting that the cost must be valid, it is possible
that those assertions will fail for perfectly valid IR. An incomplete
cost-model probably shouldn't be a reason for the compiler to break.
It's better to consider these costs as 'very expensive' and ignore them
for other reasons. At some point, we should consider replacing -1 with
some other mechanism.
Reviewed By: paulwalker-arm, dmgreen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99502
Lookup tables generate non PIC-friendly code, which requires dynamic relocation as described in:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45244
This patch adds a new pass that converts lookup tables to relative lookup tables to make them PIC-friendly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94355
This can only happen if offset types that are larger than the
pointer size are involved. The previous implementation did not
assert in this case because it initialized the APInts to the
width of one of the variables -- though I strongly suspect it
did not compute correct results in this case.
Fixes https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=32621
reported by fhahn.
If the sizes of both memory locations are unknown, we can only
perform a check on the underlying objects. There's no point in
going through GEP decomposition in this case.
The current linear expression decomposition handles zext/sext by
decomposing the casted operand, and then checking NUW/NSW flags
to determine whether the extension can be distributed. This has
some disadvantages:
First, it is not possible to perform a partial decomposition. If
we have zext((x + C1) +<nuw> C2) then we will fail to decompose
the expression entirely, even though it would be safe and
profitable to decompose it to zext(x + C1) +<nuw> zext(C2)
Second, we may end up performing unnecessary decompositions,
which will later be discarded because they lack nowrap flags
necessary for extensions.
Third, correctness of the code is not entirely obvious: At a high
level, we encounter zext(x -<nuw> C) in the form of a zext on the
linear expression x + (-C) with nuw flag set. Notably, this case
must be treated as zext(x) + -zext(C) rather than zext(x) + zext(-C).
The code handles this correctly by speculatively zexting constants
to the final bitwidth, and performing additional fixup if the
actual extension turns out to be an sext. This was not immediately
obvious to me.
This patch inverts the approach: An ExtendedValue represents a
zext(sext(V)), and linear expression decomposition will try to
decompose V further, either by absorbing another sext/zext into the
ExtendedValue, or by distributing zext(sext(x op C)) over a binary
operator with appropriate nsw/nuw flags. At each step we can
determine whether distribution is legal and abort with a partial
decomposition if not. We also know which extensions we need to
apply to constants, and don't need to speculate or fixup.
While explicit sext instructions were handled correctly, the
implicit sext that occurs if the offset is smaller than the
pointer size blindly assumed that sext(X * Scale + Offset) is the
same as sext(X) * Scale + Offset, which is obviously not correct.
Fix this by extracting the code that handles linear expression
extension and reusing it for the implicit sext as well.
A number of variables need to be correctly initialized on entry
to GetLinearExpression() for the implementation to behave reasonably.
The fact that SExtBits can currenlty be non-zero on entry is a bug,
as demonstrated by the added test: For implicit sexts by the GEP,
we do currently skip legality checks.
Currently, we'd produce an incorrect decomposition, because we
already recursively called GetLinearExpression(), so the Scale=1,
Offset=0 will not necessarily be relative to the shl itself.
Now, this doesn't actually matter for functional correctness,
because such a shift is poison anyway, so its okay to return
an incorrect decomposition. It's still unnecessarily confusing
though, and we can easily avoid this by checking the bitwidth
earlier.
Nowrap flags between mul and shl differ in that mul nsw allows
multiplication of 1 * INT_MIN, while shl nsw does not. This means
that it is always fine to transfer shl nowrap flags to muls, but
not necessarily the other way around. In this case the NUW/NSW
results refer to mul/add operations, so it's fine to retain the
flags from the shl.
Handle (x << s) != (y << s) where x != y and the shifts are
non-wrapping. Once again, this establishes parity with the
corresponing mul fold that already exists. The shift case is
more powerful because we don't need to guard against multiplies
by zero.
This handles the pattern X != X << C for non-zero X and C and a
non-overflowing shift. This establishes parity with the corresponing
fold for multiplies.
This is mainly for clarity: It doesn't make sense to do any
negative/positive checks when dealing with a nuw add/mul. These
only make sense to nsw add/mul.
This patch enables the cost-benefit-analysis-based inliner by default
if we have instrumentation profile.
- SPEC CPU 2017 shows a 0.4% improvement.
- An internal large benchmark shows a 0.9% reduction in the cycle
count along with 14.6% reduction in the number of call instructions
executed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98213
getPointersDiff would previously round down the difference between two
pointers to a multiple of the element size of the pointee, which could
result in a pointer value being decreased a little.
Alexey Bataev has graciously agreed to add a testcase for this;
submitting the bugfix now to unblock.
loop:
%cmp.0 = phi i32 [ 3, %entry ], [ %inc, %loop ]
%pos.0 = phi i32 [ 1, %entry ], [ %cmp.0, %loop ]
...
%inc = add i32 %cmp.0, 1
br label %loop
On above example, %pos.0 uses previous iteration's %cmp.0 with backedge
according to PHI's instruction's defintion. If the %inc is not same among
iterations, we can say the two PHIs are not same.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98422
Rather than special-casing assume in BasicAA getModRefBehavior(),
do this one level higher, in the attribute handling of CallBase.
For assumes with operand bundles, the inaccessiblememonly attribute
applies regardless of operand bundles.
With cost-benefit analysis for inlining, we bypass the cost-threshold by returning inline result from call analyzer early.
However the cost and threshold are still available from call analyzer, and when cost is actually higher than threshold, we incorrect set the reason.
The change makes the decision from cost-benefit analysis explicit. It's mostly NFC, except that it allows the priority-based sample loader inliner used by CSSPGO to use cost-benefit heuristic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99302
This patch enables the cost-benefit-analysis-based inliner by default
if we have instrumentation profile.
- SPEC CPU 2017 shows a 0.4% improvement.
- An internal large benchmark shows a 0.9% reduction in the cycle
count along with 14.6% reduction in the number of call instructions
executed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98213
This is similar to the select logic just ahead of the new code.
Min/max choose exactly one value from the inputs, so if both of
those are a power-of-2, then the result must be a power-of-2.
This might help with D98152, but we likely still need other
pieces of the puzzle to avoid regressions.
The change in PatternMatch.h is needed to build with clang.
It's possible there is a better way to deal with the 'const'
incompatibities.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99276
SCEV currently tries to prove implications of x pred y by also
trying to imply ~y pred ~x. This is expensive in terms of
compile-time (in fact, the majority of isImpliedCond compile-time
is spent here) and generally not fruitful. The issue is that this
also swaps the operands and thus breaks canonical ordering. If
originally we were trying to prove an implication like
X > C1 -> Y > C2, then we'll now try to prove X > C1 -> C3 > ~Y,
which will not work.
The only real case where we can get some use out of this transform
is if the original conditions were in the form X > C1 -> Y < C2, were
then swapped to X > C1 -> C2 > Y and are then swapped again here to
X > C1 -> ~Y > C3.
As such, handle this at a higher level, where we are doing the
swapping in the first place. There's four different ways that we
can line up a predicate and a swapped predicate, so we use some
heuristics to pick some profitable way.
Because we now try this transform at a higher level
(isImpliedCondOperands rather than isImpliedCondOperandsHelper),
we can also prove additional facts. Of the added tests, one was
proven previously while the other wasn't.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90926
Lookup tables generate non PIC-friendly code, which requires dynamic relocation as described in:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45244
This patch adds a new pass that converts lookup tables to relative lookup tables to make them PIC-friendly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94355
FindAvailableLoadedValue() relies on FindAvailablePtrLoadStore() to run
the alias analysis when searching for an equivalent value. However,
FindAvailablePtrLoadStore() calls the alias analysis framework with a
memory location for the load constructed from an address and a size,
which thus lacks TBAA metadata info. This commit modifies
FindAvailablePtrLoadStore() to accept an optional memory location as
parameter to allow FindAvailableLoadedValue() to create it based on the
load instruction, which would then have TBAA metadata info attached.
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99206
This patch changes the interface to take a RegisterKind, to indicate
whether the register bitwidth of a scalar register, fixed-width vector
register, or scalable vector register must be returned.
Reviewed By: paulwalker-arm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98874
As mentioned in [[ https://reviews.llvm.org/D96979 | D96979 ]], I'm extending the **IsGuaranteedLoopInvariant** check also to the `MemorySSA.cpp` file.
@fhahn For now I didn't unify the function into `MemorySSA.h` because, as you mentioned, it's not directly MSSA related. I'm open to suggestions to find a better place so we can improve the unification process.
Reviewed By: fhahn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97155
Added getPointersDiff function to LoopAccessAnalysis and used it instead
direct calculatoin of the distance between pointers and/or
isConsecutiveAccess function in SLP vectorizer to improve compile time
and detection of stores consecutive chains.
Part of D57059
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98967
This fixes a regression reported on D99022: If a call has operand
bundles, then the inaccessiblememonly attribute on the function
will be ignored, as operand bundles can affect modref behavior in
the general case. However, for assume operand bundles in particular
this is not the case.
Adjust getModRefBehavior() to always report inaccessiblememonly
for assumes, regardless of presence of operand bundles.
Added getPointersDiff function to LoopAccessAnalysis and used it instead
direct calculatoin of the distance between pointers and/or
isConsecutiveAccess function in SLP vectorizer to improve compile time
and detection of stores consecutive chains.
Part of D57059
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98967
This select of ctpop with 0 pattern can get left behind after
loop idiom recognize converts a loop to ctpop. LLVM 10 was able
to optimize this, but LLVM 11 and later is not. The difference
seems to be that some select transforms are now limited based
on canCreateUndefOrPoison.
Teaching canCreateUndefOrPoison about ctpop restores the
LLVM 10 codegen.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99207
Lookup tables generate non PIC-friendly code, which requires dynamic relocation as described in:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45244
This patch adds a new pass that converts lookup tables to relative lookup tables to make them PIC-friendly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94355
This is an alternative to D98391/D98585, playing things more
conservatively. If AllowRefinement == false, then we don't use
InstSimplify methods at all, and instead explicitly implement a
small number of non-refining folds. Most cases are handled by
constant folding, and I only had to add three folds to cover
our unit tests / test-suite. While this may lose some optimization
power, I think it is safer to approach from this direction, given
how many issues this code has already caused.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99027
These intrinsics don't need to be marked as arbitrary writing,
it's sufficient to write inaccessible memory (aka "side effect")
to preserve control dependencies. This means less special-casing
in BasicAA. This is intended as an alternative to D98925.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99022
This is no-functional-change intended (NFC), but needed to allow
optimizer passes to use the API. See D98898 for a proposed usage
by SimplifyCFG.
I'm simplifying the code by removing the cl::opt. That was added
back with the original commit in D19488, but I don't see any
evidence in regression tests that it was used. Target-specific
overrides can use the usual patterns to adjust as necessary.
We could also restore that cl::opt, but it was not clear to me
exactly how to do it in the convoluted TTI class structure.
This patch exploits the knowledge that we may be running many fewer than bitwidth iterations of the loop, and may be able to disallow the overflow case. This patch specifically implements only the shl case, but this can be generalized to ashr and lshr without difficulty.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98222
Switch to use cold threshold from profile summary for cold context merging and trimming, instead of relying on hard coded values. Minor refactoring included for switch names, etc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98921
X != X * C is true if:
* C is not 0 or 1
* X is not 0
* mul is nsw or nuw
Proof: https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/uwF29z
This is motivated by one of the cases in D98422.
There seems to be an impedance mismatch between what the type
system considers an aggregate (structs and arrays) and what
constants consider an aggregate (structs, arrays and vectors).
Adjust the type check to consider vectors as well. The previous
version of the patch dropped the type check entirely, but it
turns out that getAggregateElement() does require the constant
to be an aggregate in some edge cases: For Poison/Undef the
getNumElements() API is called, without checking in advance that
we're dealing with an aggregate. Possibly the implementation should
avoid doing that, but for now I'm adding an assert so the next
person doesn't fall into this trap.
This patch is plumbing to support work towards the goal outlined in the recent llvm-dev post "[llvm-dev] RFC: Decomposing deref(N) into deref(N) + nofree".
The point of this change is purely to simplify iteration on other pieces on way to making the switch. Rebuilding with a change to Value.h is slow and painful, so I want to get the API change landed. Once that's done, I plan to more closely audit each caller, add the inference rules in their own patch, then post a patch with the langref changes and test diffs. The value of the command line flag is that we can exercise the inference logic in standalone patches without needing the whole switch ready to go just yet.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98908
By definition of Implication operator, `false -> true` and `false -> false`. It means that
`false` implies any predicate, no matter true or false. We don't need to go any further
trying to prove the statement we need and just always say that `false` implies it in this case.
In practice it means that we are trying to prove something guarded by `false` condition,
which means that this code is unreachable, and we can safely prove any fact or perform any
transform in this code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98706
Reviewed By: lebedev.ri
This reverts commit 11b70b9e3a.
The bot failure was due to ArgumentPromotion deleting functions
without deleting their analyses. This was separately fixed in 4b1c807.
Provides API that allows to check predicate for being true or
false with one call. Current implementation is naive and just
calls isKnownPredicate twice, but further we can rework this
logic trying to use one check to prove both facts.
This adds an Mask ArrayRef to getShuffleCost, so that if an exact mask
can be provided a more accurate cost can be provided by the backend.
For example VREV costs could be returned by the ARM backend. This should
be an NFC until then, laying the groundwork for that to be added.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98206
BasicAA stores a reference to LoopInfo inside. This imposes an implicit
requirement of keeping it up to date whenever we modify the IR (in particular,
whenever we modify terminators of blocks that belong to loops). Failing
to do so leads to incorrect state of the LoopInfo.
Because general AA does not require loop info updates and provides to API to
update it properly, the users of AA reasonably assume that there is no need to
update the loop info. It may be a reason of bugs, as example in PR43276 shows.
This patch drops dependence of BasicAA on LoopInfo to avoid this problem.
This may potentially pessimize the result of queries to BasicAA.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98627
Reviewed By: nikic
This is a follow-up to D98588, and fixes the inline `FIXME` about a GEP-related simplification not
preserving the provenance.
https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/qbQoAY
Additional tests were added in {rGf125f28afdb59eba29d2491dac0dfc0a7bf1b60b}
Depends on D98672
Reviewed By: lebedev.ri
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98611
One of (and primary) callers of isBasicBlockEntryGuardedByCond is
isKnownPredicateAt, which makes isKnownPredicate check before it.
It already makes non-recursive check inside. So, on this execution
path this check is made twice. The only other caller is
isLoopEntryGuardedByCond. Moving the check there should save some
compile time.
In preparation for D98611, the upcoming change will need to apply additional checks to `P` and `V`,
and so this refactor paves the way for adding additional checks in a less awkward way.
Reviewed By: lebedev.ri
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98672
The motivating pattern was handled in 0a2d69480d ,
but we should have this for symmetry.
But this really highlights that we could generalize for
any shifted constant if we match this in instcombine.
https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/MrmVNt
Normally, this function just doesn't bother about cycles,
and hopes that the caller supplied small-enough depth
so that at worst it will take a potentially large,
but limited amount of time. But that obviously doesn't work
if there is no depth limit.
This reapples 36f1c3db66,
but without asserting, just bailout once cycle is detected.
Jeroen Dobbelaere in
https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2021-March/149206.html
is reporting that this function can end up in an endless loop
when called from SROA w/ full restrict patches.
For now, simply ensure that such problems are caught earlier/easier.
This reverts commit 329aeb5db4,
and relands commit 61f006ac65.
This is a continuation of D89456.
As it was suggested there, now that SCEV models `PtrToInt`,
we can try to improve SCEV's pointer handling.
In particular, i believe, i will need this in the future
to further fix `SCEVAddExpr`operation type handling.
This removes special handling of `ConstantPointerNull`
from `ScalarEvolution::createSCEV()`, and add constant folding
into `ScalarEvolution::getPtrToIntExpr()`.
This way, `null` constants stay as such in SCEV's,
but gracefully become zero integers when asked.
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98147
When calling getClobberingMemoryAccess() with MemoryLocation on a
MemoryPHI starting access, the walker currently immediately bails
and returns the starting access. This makes sense for the API that
does not accept a location (as we wouldn't know what clobber we
should be checking for), but doesn't make sense for the
MemoryLocation-based API. This means that it can't look through
a MemoryPHI if it's the starting access, but can if there is one
more non-clobbering def in between. This patch removes the limitation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98557
This is a continuation of D89456.
As it was suggested there, now that SCEV models `PtrToInt`,
we can try to improve SCEV's pointer handling.
In particular, i believe, i will need this in the future
to further fix `SCEVAddExpr`operation type handling.
This removes special handling of `ConstantPointerNull`
from `ScalarEvolution::createSCEV()`, and add constant folding
into `ScalarEvolution::getPtrToIntExpr()`.
This way, `null` constants stay as such in SCEV's,
but gracefully become zero integers when asked.
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98147
Before D94153 this threshold was in a pre-scaled units.
After D94153 inlining threshold multiplier is not applied
to this portion of the threshold anymore. Restore the
threshold by applying the multiplier.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98362
Add simplification of smul.fix and smul.fix.sat according to
X * 0 -> 0
X * undef -> 0
X * (1 << scale) -> X
This includes the commuted patterns and splatted vectors.
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98299
Do constant folding according to
posion * C -> poison
C * poison -> poison
undef * C -> 0
C * undef -> 0
for smul_fix and smul_fix_sat intrinsics (for any scale).
Reviewed By: nikic, aqjune, nagisa
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98410
Relative to the previous implementation, this always uses
aliasesUnknownInst() instead of aliasesPointer() to correctly
handle atomics. The added test case was previously miscompiled.
-----
Even when MemorySSA-based LICM is used, an AST is still populated
for scalar promotion. As the AST has quadratic complexity, a lot
of time is spent in this step despite the existing access count
limit. This patch optimizes the identification of promotable stores.
The idea here is pretty simple: We're only interested in must-alias
mod sets of loop invariant pointers. As such, only populate the AST
with loop-invariant loads and stores (anything else is definitely
not promotable) and then discard any sets which alias with any of
the remaining, definitely non-promotable accesses.
If we promoted something, check whether this has made some other
accesses loop invariant and thus possible promotion candidates.
This is much faster in practice, because we need to perform AA
queries for O(NumPromotable^2 + NumPromotable*NumNonPromotable)
instead of O(NumTotal^2), and NumPromotable tends to be small.
Additionally, promotable accesses have loop invariant pointers,
for which AA is cheaper.
This has a signicant positive compile-time impact. We save ~1.8%
geomean on CTMark at O3, with 6% on lencod in particular and 25%
on individual files.
Conceptually, this change is NFC, but may not be so in practice,
because the AST is only an approximation, and can produce
different results depending on the order in which accesses are
added. However, there is at least no impact on the number of promotions
(licm.NumPromoted) in test-suite O3 configuration with this change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89264
The current logic in TargetLibraryInfoImpl::getLibFunc() was only treating
strcpy, etc. with i8* arguments in address space zero as a valid library
function. However, in the CHERI and Morello targets we expect all libc
functions to use address space 200 arguments.
This commit updates isValidProtoForLibFunc() to check that the argument
is a pointer type. This also drops the check for i8* since we should not
be checking the pointee type any more.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95142
Fix bug in MemoryDependence [and thus GVN] for invariant group.
Previously MemDep didn't verify that the store was storing into a
pointer rather than a store simply using a pointer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98267
This was suggested by lebedev.ri over on D96534. You'll note lack of tests. During review, we weren't actually able to find a case which exercises it, but both I and lebedev.ri feel it's a reasonable change, straight forward, and near free.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97064
Revert 3d8f842712
Revision triggers a miscompile sinking a store incorrectly outside a
threading loop. Detected by tsan.
Reverting while investigating.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89264
The check `tightlyNested()` in `LoopInterchange` is similar to the one in `LoopNest`.
In fact, the former misses some cases where loop-interchange is not feasible and results in incorrect behaviour.
Replacing it with the much robust version provided by `LoopNest` reduces code duplications and fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=48113.
`LoopInterchange` has a weaker definition of tightly or perfectly nesting-ness than the one implemented in `LoopNest::arePerfectlyNested()`.
Therefore, `tightlyNested()` is instead implemented with `LoopNest::checkLoopsStructure` and additional checks for unsafe instructions.
Reviewed By: Whitney
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97290
This is a patch that adds folding of two logical and/ors that share one variable:
a && (a && b) -> a && b
a && (a & b) -> a && b
...
This is towards removing the poison-unsafe select optimization (D93065 has more context).
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96945
There seems to be an impedance mismatch between what the type
system considers an aggregate (structs and arrays) and what
constants consider an aggregate (structs, arrays and vectors).
Rather than adjusting the type check, simply drop it entirely,
as getAggregateElement() is well-defined for non-aggregates: It
simply returns null in that case.
Instead of handling a number of special cases for selects, handle
this generally when inferring ranges from conditions. We already
infer ranges from `x + C pred C2` to `x`, so doing the same for
`x pred C2` to `x + C` is straightforward.
sample loader pass.
In https://reviews.llvm.org/rG5fb65c02ca5e91e7e1a00e0efdb8edc899f3e4b9,
to prevent repeated indirect call promotion for the same indirect call
and the same target, we used zero-count value profile to indicate an
indirect call has been promoted for a certain target. We removed
PromotedInsns cache in the same patch. However, there was a problem in
that patch described below, and that problem led me to add PromotedInsns
back as a mitigation in
https://reviews.llvm.org/rG4ffad1fb489f691825d6c7d78e1626de142f26cf.
When we get value profile from metadata by calling getValueProfDataFromInst,
we need to specify the maximum possible number of values we expect to read.
We uses MaxNumPromotions in the last patch so the maximum number of value
information extracted from metadata is MaxNumPromotions. If we have many
values including zero-count values when we write the metadata, some of them
will be dropped when we read them because we only read MaxNumPromotions
values. It will allow repeated indirect call promotion again. We need to
make sure if there are values indicating promoted targets, those values need
to be saved in metadata with higher priority than other values.
The patch fixed that problem. We change to use -1 to represent the count
of a promoted target instead of 0 so it is easier to sort the values.
When we prepare to update the metadata in updateIDTMetaData, we will sort
the values in the descending count order and extract only MaxNumPromotions
values to write into metadata. Since -1 is the max uint64_t number, if we
have equal to or less than MaxNumPromotions of -1 count values, they will
all be kept in metadata. If we have more than MaxNumPromotions of -1 count
values, we will only save MaxNumPromotions such values maximally. In such
case, we have logic in place in doesHistoryAllowICP to guarantee no more
promotion in sample loader pass will happen for the indirect call, because
it has been promoted enough.
With this change, now we can remove PromotedInsns without problem.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97350
BasicAA knows how to analyze phis, but to control compile time, we're fairly limited in doing so. This patch loosens that restriction just slightly when there is exactly one phi input (after discounting induction variable increments). The result of this is that we can handle more cases around nested and sibling loops with pointer induction variables.
A few points to note.
* This is deliberately extremely restrictive about recursing through at most one input of the phi. There's a known general problem with BasicAA sometimes hitting exponential compile time already, and this patch makes every effort not to compound the problem. Once the root issue is fixed, we can probably loosen the restrictions here a bit.
* As seen in the test file, we're still missing cases which aren't *directly* based on phis (e.g. using the indvar increment). I believe this to be a separate problem and am going to explore this in another patch once this one lands.
* As seen in the test file, this results in the unfortunate fact that using phivalues sometimes results in worse quality results. I believe this comes down to an oversight in how recursive phi detection was implemented for phivalues. I'm happy to tackle this in a follow up change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97401
explicitly emitting retainRV or claimRV calls in the IR
This reapplies ed4718eccb, which was reverted
because it was causing a miscompile. The bug that was causing the miscompile
has been fixed in 75805dce5f.
Original commit message:
Background:
This fixes a longstanding problem where llvm breaks ARC's autorelease
optimization (see the link below) by separating calls from the marker
instructions or retainRV/claimRV calls. The backend changes are in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D92569.
https://clang.llvm.org/docs/AutomaticReferenceCounting.html#arc-runtime-objc-autoreleasereturnvalue
What this patch does to fix the problem:
- The front-end adds operand bundle "clang.arc.attachedcall" to calls,
which indicates the call is implicitly followed by a marker
instruction and an implicit retainRV/claimRV call that consumes the
call result. In addition, it emits a call to
@llvm.objc.clang.arc.noop.use, which consumes the call result, to
prevent the middle-end passes from changing the return type of the
called function. This is currently done only when the target is arm64
and the optimization level is higher than -O0.
- ARC optimizer temporarily emits retainRV/claimRV calls after the calls
with the operand bundle in the IR and removes the inserted calls after
processing the function.
- ARC contract pass emits retainRV/claimRV calls after the call with the
operand bundle. It doesn't remove the operand bundle on the call since
the backend needs it to emit the marker instruction. The retainRV and
claimRV calls are emitted late in the pipeline to prevent optimization
passes from transforming the IR in a way that makes it harder for the
ARC middle-end passes to figure out the def-use relationship between
the call and the retainRV/claimRV calls (which is the cause of
PR31925).
- The function inliner removes an autoreleaseRV call in the callee if
nothing in the callee prevents it from being paired up with the
retainRV/claimRV call in the caller. It then inserts a release call if
claimRV is attached to the call since autoreleaseRV+claimRV is
equivalent to a release. If it cannot find an autoreleaseRV call, it
tries to transfer the operand bundle to a function call in the callee.
This is important since the ARC optimizer can remove the autoreleaseRV
returning the callee result, which makes it impossible to pair it up
with the retainRV/claimRV call in the caller. If that fails, it simply
emits a retain call in the IR if retainRV is attached to the call and
does nothing if claimRV is attached to it.
- SCCP refrains from replacing the return value of a call with a
constant value if the call has the operand bundle. This ensures the
call always has at least one user (the call to
@llvm.objc.clang.arc.noop.use).
- This patch also fixes a bug in replaceUsesOfNonProtoConstant where
multiple operand bundles of the same kind were being added to a call.
Future work:
- Use the operand bundle on x86-64.
- Fix the auto upgrader to convert call+retainRV/claimRV pairs into
calls with the operand bundles.
rdar://71443534
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92808
We are tracking an FP instruction that does *not* have FMF (reassoc)
properties, so calling that "Unsafe" seems opposite of the common
reading.
I also removed one getter method by rolling the null check into
the access. Further simplification seems possible.
The motivation is to clean up the interactions between FMF and
function-level attributes in these classes and their callers.
This is a mess, but this is hopefully no-functional-change.
The 'Prev' descriptor is only used for min/max recurrences
or when starting a match from a phi, so it should not be a
factor when propagating FMF for fmul/fadd.
The API is confusing (and should be reduced in subsequent steps)
because the "UnsafeAlgebraInst" appears to actually be a placeholder
for a recurrence that does NOT have FMF, but we still want to
treat it as reassociative.
This is almost purely NFC, it just fits more obviously in the flow of the code now that we've standardized on the index different approach. The non-NFC bit is that because of canceling the VariableOffsets in the subtract, we can now handle the case where both sides involve a common variable offset. This isn't an "interesting" improvement; it just happens to fall out of the natural code structure.
One subtle point - the placement of this above the BaseAlias check is important in the original code as this can return NoAlias even when we can't find a relation between the bases otherwise.
Also added some enhancement TODOs noticed while understanding the existing code.
Note: This is slightly different than the LGTMed version. I fixed the "inbounds" issue Nikita noticed with the original code in e6e5ef4 and rebased this to include the same fix.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97520
This was pointed out in review of D97520 by Nikita, but existed in the original code as well.
The basic issue is that a decomposed GEP expression describes (potentially) more than one getelementptr. The "inbounds" derived UB which justifies this aliasing rule requires that the entire offset be composed of "inbounds" geps. Otherwise, as can be seen in the recently added and changes in this patch test, we can end up with a large commulative offset with only a small sub-offset actually being "inbounds". If that small sub-offset lies within the object, the result was unsound.
We could potentially be fancier here, but for the moment, simply be conservative when any of the GEPs parsed aren't inbounds.
This caused miscompiles of Chromium tests for iOS due clobbering of live
registers. See discussion on the code review for details.
> Background:
>
> This fixes a longstanding problem where llvm breaks ARC's autorelease
> optimization (see the link below) by separating calls from the marker
> instructions or retainRV/claimRV calls. The backend changes are in
> https://reviews.llvm.org/D92569.
>
> https://clang.llvm.org/docs/AutomaticReferenceCounting.html#arc-runtime-objc-autoreleasereturnvalue
>
> What this patch does to fix the problem:
>
> - The front-end adds operand bundle "clang.arc.attachedcall" to calls,
> which indicates the call is implicitly followed by a marker
> instruction and an implicit retainRV/claimRV call that consumes the
> call result. In addition, it emits a call to
> @llvm.objc.clang.arc.noop.use, which consumes the call result, to
> prevent the middle-end passes from changing the return type of the
> called function. This is currently done only when the target is arm64
> and the optimization level is higher than -O0.
>
> - ARC optimizer temporarily emits retainRV/claimRV calls after the calls
> with the operand bundle in the IR and removes the inserted calls after
> processing the function.
>
> - ARC contract pass emits retainRV/claimRV calls after the call with the
> operand bundle. It doesn't remove the operand bundle on the call since
> the backend needs it to emit the marker instruction. The retainRV and
> claimRV calls are emitted late in the pipeline to prevent optimization
> passes from transforming the IR in a way that makes it harder for the
> ARC middle-end passes to figure out the def-use relationship between
> the call and the retainRV/claimRV calls (which is the cause of
> PR31925).
>
> - The function inliner removes an autoreleaseRV call in the callee if
> nothing in the callee prevents it from being paired up with the
> retainRV/claimRV call in the caller. It then inserts a release call if
> claimRV is attached to the call since autoreleaseRV+claimRV is
> equivalent to a release. If it cannot find an autoreleaseRV call, it
> tries to transfer the operand bundle to a function call in the callee.
> This is important since the ARC optimizer can remove the autoreleaseRV
> returning the callee result, which makes it impossible to pair it up
> with the retainRV/claimRV call in the caller. If that fails, it simply
> emits a retain call in the IR if retainRV is attached to the call and
> does nothing if claimRV is attached to it.
>
> - SCCP refrains from replacing the return value of a call with a
> constant value if the call has the operand bundle. This ensures the
> call always has at least one user (the call to
> @llvm.objc.clang.arc.noop.use).
>
> - This patch also fixes a bug in replaceUsesOfNonProtoConstant where
> multiple operand bundles of the same kind were being added to a call.
>
> Future work:
>
> - Use the operand bundle on x86-64.
>
> - Fix the auto upgrader to convert call+retainRV/claimRV pairs into
> calls with the operand bundles.
>
> rdar://71443534
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92808
This reverts commit ed4718eccb.
Even when MemorySSA-based LICM is used, an AST is still populated
for scalar promotion. As the AST has quadratic complexity, a lot
of time is spent in this step despite the existing access count
limit. This patch optimizes the identification of promotable stores.
The idea here is pretty simple: We're only interested in must-alias
mod sets of loop invariant pointers. As such, only populate the AST
with loop-invariant loads and stores (anything else is definitely
not promotable) and then discard any sets which alias with any of
the remaining, definitely non-promotable accesses.
If we promoted something, check whether this has made some other
accesses loop invariant and thus possible promotion candidates.
This is much faster in practice, because we need to perform AA
queries for O(NumPromotable^2 + NumPromotable*NumNonPromotable)
instead of O(NumTotal^2), and NumPromotable tends to be small.
Additionally, promotable accesses have loop invariant pointers,
for which AA is cheaper.
This has a signicant positive compile-time impact. We save ~1.8%
geomean on CTMark at O3, with 6% on lencod in particular and 25%
on individual files.
Conceptually, this change is NFC, but may not be so in practice,
because the AST is only an approximation, and can produce
different results depending on the order in which accesses are
added. However, there is at least no impact on the number of promotions
(licm.NumPromoted) in test-suite O3 configuration with this change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89264
For the cases of two clobbering loads and one loaded object is fully contained
in the second `BasicAAResult::aliasGEP` returns just `PartialAlias` that
is actually more common case of partial overlap, it doesn't say anything about
actual overlapping sizes.
AA users such as GVN and DSE have no functionality to estimate aliasing of GEPs
with non-constant offsets. The change stores estimated relative offsets so they
can be used further.
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93529
This clarifies the interface of the matchSimpleRecurrence helper introduced in 8020be0b8 for non-commutative operators. After ebd3aeba, I realized the original way I framed the routine was inconsistent. For shifts, we only matched the the LHS form, but for sub we matched both and the caller wanted that information. So, instead, we now consistently match both forms for non-commutative operators and the caller becomes responsible for filtering if needed. I tried to put a clear warning in the header because I suspect the RHS form of e.g. a sub recurrence is non-obvious for most folks. (It was for me.)
Followup to D72573 - as detailed in https://blog.regehr.org/archives/1709 we don't make use of the known leading/trailing zeros for shifted values in cases where we don't know the shift amount value.
Stop ValueTracking returning zero for poison shift patterns and use the KnownBits shift helpers directly.
Extend KnownBits::shl to combine all possible shifted combinations if both min/max shift amount values are in range.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90479
Blocks that contain only a single branch instruction to the next block can be skipped in analyzing the loop-nest structure.
This is currently done by `getSingleSuccessor()`.
However, the branch instruction might have multiple targets which happen to all be the same.
In this case, the block should still be considered as empty and skipped.
An example is `test/Transforms/LoopInterchange/update-condbranch-duplicate-successors.ll` (the LIT test for this patch is modified from it as well).
Reviewed By: Whitney
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97286
And delete the SmallPtrSetImpl overload.
While here, decrease inline element counts from 8 to 4. See D97128 for the choice.
Reviewed By: tejohnson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97257
Pulled out from D90479 - this recognises invalid nsw shl patterns with signbit changes that result in poison.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97305
As a followup to D95291, getOperandsScalarizationOverhead was still
using a VF as a vector factor if the arguments were scalar, and would
assert on certain matrix intrinsics with differently sized vector
arguments. This patch removes the VF arg, instead passing the Types
through directly. This should allow it to more accurately compute the
cost without having to guess at which operands will be vectorized,
something difficult with more complex intrinsics.
This adjusts one SVE test as it is now calling the wrong intrinsic vs
veccall. Without invalid InstructCosts the cost of the scalarized
intrinsic is too low. This should get fixed when the cost of
scalarization is accounted for with scalable types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96287
getIntrinsicInstrCost takes a IntrinsicCostAttributes holding various
parameters of the intrinsic being costed. It can either be called with a
scalar intrinsic (RetTy==Scalar, VF==1), with a vector instruction
(RetTy==Vector, VF==1) or from the vectorizer with a scalar type and
vector width (RetTy==Scalar, VF>1). A RetTy==Vector, VF>1 is considered
an error. Both of the vector modes are expected to be treated the same,
but because this is confusing many backends end up getting it wrong.
Instead of trying work with those two values separately this removes the
VF parameter, widening the RetTy/ArgTys by VF used called from the
vectorizer. This keeps things simpler, but does require some other
modifications to keep things consistent.
Most backends look like this will be an improvement (or were not using
getIntrinsicInstrCost). AMDGPU needed the most changes to keep the code
from c230965ccf working. ARM removed the fix in
dfac521da1, webassembly happens to get a fixup for an SLP cost
issue and both X86 and AArch64 seem to now be using better costs from
the vectorizer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95291
These verify calls are causing a lot of slowdown on some files, up to 8x.
The LazyCallGraph infra has been tested a lot over the years, so I'm fairly confident that we don't always need to run the verifys.
These verifies took >90% of total time in one of the compilations I looked at.
Reviewed By: thakis
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97225
The result will have the same sign as the dividend unless the
result is 0. The magnitude of the result will always be less
than or equal to the dividend. So the result will have at least
as many sign bits as the dividend.
Previously we would do this if the divisor was a positive constant,
but that isn't required.
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97170
FindAvailableLoadedValue() accepts an iterator by reference. If no
available value is found, then the iterator will either be left
at a clobbering instruction or the beginning of the basic block.
This allows using FindAvailableLoadedValue() across multiple blocks.
If this functionality is not needed, as is the case in InstCombine,
then we can use a much more efficient implementation: First try
to find an available value, and only perform clobber checks if
we actually found one. As this function only looks at a very small
number of instructions (6 by default) and usually doesn't find an
available value, this saves many expensive alias analysis queries.
The existing implementation was relying on order of evaluation to achieve a particular result. This got really confusing when wanting to change the handling for arguments in a later patch.
This is a fix for https://llvm.org/PR49215 either before/after
we make a verifier enhancement for vector reductions with D96904.
I'm not sure what the current thinking is for pointer math/logic
in IR. We allow icmp on pointer values. Therefore, we match min/max
patterns, so without this patch, the vectorizer could form a vector
reduction from that sequence.
But the LangRef definitions for min/max and vector reduction
intrinsics do not allow pointer types:
https://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#llvm-smax-intrinsichttps://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#llvm-vector-reduce-umax-intrinsic
So we would crash/assert at some point - either in IR verification,
in the cost model, or in codegen. If we do want to allow this kind
of transform, we will need to update the LangRef and all of those
parts of the compiler.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97047
When computing a range for a SCEVUnknown, today we use computeKnownBits for unsigned ranges, and computeNumSignBots for signed ranges. This means we miss opportunities to improve range results.
One common missed pattern is that we have a signed range of a value which CKB can determine is positive, but CNSB doesn't convey that information. The current range includes the negative part, and is thus double the size.
Per the removed comment, the original concern which delayed using both (after some code merging years back) was a compile time concern. CTMark results (provided by Nikita, thanks!) showed a geomean impact of about 0.1%. This doesn't seem large enough to avoid higher quality results.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96534
In both ADCE and BDCE (via DemandedBits) we should not remove
instructions that are not guaranteed to return. This issue was
pointed out by fhahn in the recent llvm-dev thread.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96993
This moves the willReturn() helper from CallBase to Instruction,
so that it can be used in a more generic manner. This will make
it easier to fix additional passes (ADCE and BDCE), and will give
us one place to change if additional instructions should become
non-willreturn (e.g. there has been talk about handling volatile
operations this way).
I have also included the IntrinsicInst workaround directly in
here, so that it gets applied consistently. (As such this change
is not entirely NFC -- FuncAttrs will now use this as well.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96992
This is a simpler variant of D96647. It just adds a straightforward
depth limit with a high cutoff, without introducing complex logic
for BatchAA consistency. It accepts that we may cache a sub-optimal
result if the depth limit is hit.
Eventually this should be more fully addressed by D96647 or similar,
but in the meantime this avoids stack overflows in a cheap way.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96996
Found a problem in indirect call promotion in sample loader pass. Currently
if an indirect call is promoted for a target, and if the parent function is
inlined into some other function, the indirect call can be promoted for the
same target again. That is redundent which can harm performance and can cause
excessive compile time in some extreme case.
The patch fixes the issue. If a target is promoted for an indirect call, the
patch will write ICP metadata with the target call count being set to 0.
In the later ICP in sample profile loader, if it sees a target has 0 count
for an indirect call, it knows the target has been promoted and won't do
indirect call promotion for the indirect call.
The fix brings 0.1~0.2% performance on our search benchmark.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96806
We can always look through single-argument (LCSSA) phi nodes when
performing alias analysis. getUnderlyingObject() already does this,
but stripPointerCastsAndInvariantGroups() does not. We still look
through these phi nodes with the usual aliasPhi() logic, but
sometimes get sub-optimal results due to the restrictions on value
equivalence when looking through arbitrary phi nodes. I think it's
generally beneficial to keep the underlying object logic and the
pointer cast stripping logic in sync, insofar as it is possible.
With this patch we get marginally better results:
aa.NumMayAlias | 5010069 | 5009861
aa.NumMustAlias | 347518 | 347674
aa.NumNoAlias | 27201336 | 27201528
...
licm.NumPromoted | 1293 | 1296
I've renamed the relevant strip method to stripPointerCastsForAliasAnalysis(),
as we're past the point where we can explicitly spell out everything
that's getting stripped.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96668
SROA does not correctly account for offsets in TBAA/TBAA struct metadata.
This patch creates functionality for generating new MD with the corresponding
offset and updates SROA to use this functionality.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95826
This patch enables scalable vectorization of loops with integer/fast reductions, e.g:
```
unsigned sum = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i) {
sum += a[i];
}
```
A new TTI interface, isLegalToVectorizeReduction, has been added to prevent
reductions which are not supported for scalable types from vectorizing.
If the reduction is not supported for a given scalable VF,
computeFeasibleMaxVF will fall back to using fixed-width vectorization.
Reviewed By: david-arm, fhahn, dmgreen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95245
The GPUDivergenceAnalysis is now renamed to just "DivergenceAnalysis"
since there is no conflict with LegacyDivergenceAnalysis. In the
legacy PM, this analysis can only be used through the legacy DA
serving as a wrapper. It is now made available as a pass in the new
PM, and has no relation with the legacy DA.
The new DA currently cannot handle irreducible control flow; its
presence can cause the analysis to run indefinitely. The analysis is
now modified to detect this and report all instructions in the
function as divergent. This is super conservative, but allows the
analysis to be used without hanging the compiler.
Reviewed By: aeubanks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96615
In the motivating example from https://llvm.org/PR49171 and
reduced test here, we would unroll and clone assumes so much
that compile-time effectively became infinite while analyzing
all of those assumes.
Currently, setting the `no-nans-fp-math` attribute to true will allow
loops with fmin/fmax to vectorize, though we should be requiring that
`no-signed-zeros-fp-math` is also set.
This patch adds the check for no-signed-zeros at the function level and includes
tests to make sure we don't vectorize functions with only one of the attributes
associated.
Reviewed By: spatel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96604
This patch adds a new intrinsic experimental.vector.reduce that takes a single
vector and returns a vector of matching type but with the original lane order
reversed. For example:
```
vector.reverse(<A,B,C,D>) ==> <D,C,B,A>
```
The new intrinsic supports fixed and scalable vectors types.
The fixed-width vector relies on shufflevector to maintain existing behaviour.
Scalable vector uses the new ISD node - VECTOR_REVERSE.
This new intrinsic is one of the named shufflevector intrinsics proposed on the
mailing-list in the RFC at [1].
Patch by Paul Walker (@paulwalker-arm).
[1] https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-November/146864.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94883
This refactors shouldFavorPostInc() and shouldFavorBackedgeIndex() into
getPreferredAddressingMode() so that we have one interface to steer LSR in
generating the preferred addressing mode.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96600
At this point, we can treat the case of GEP/GEP aliasing and
GEP/non-GEP aliasing in essentially the same way. The only
differences are that we need to do an additional negative GEP base
check, and that we perform a bailout on unknown sizes for the
GEP/non-GEP case (the latter exists only to limit compile-time).
This change is not quite NFC due to the peculiar effect that
the DecomposedGEP for V2 can actually be non-trivial even if V2
is not a GEP. The reason for this is that getUnderlyingObject()
can look through LCSSA phi nodes, while stripPointerCasts() doesn't.
This can lead to slightly better results if single-entry phi nodes
occur inside a loop, where looking through the phi node via aliasPhi()
would subject it to phi cycle equivalence restrictions. It would
probably make sense to adjust pointer cast stripping (for AA) to
handle this case, and ensure consistent results.
For two GEPs with identical offsets, we currently first perform
a base address query without size information, and then if it is
MayAlias, perform another with size information. This is pointless,
as the latter query should produce strictly better results.
This was not quite true historically due to the way that NoAlias
assumptions were handled, but that issue has since been resolved.
We currently detect GEPs that have exactly the same indexes by
comparing the Offsets and VarIndices. However, the latter implicitly
performs equality comparisons between two values, which is not
generally legal inside BasicAA, due to the possibility of comparisons
across phi cycles.
I believe that in this particular instance this actually ends up being
unproblematic, at least I wasn't able to come up with any cases that
could result in an incorrect root query result.
In the interest of being defensive, compute GetIndexDifference earlier
(which knows how to handle phi cycles properly) and use the result of
that to determine whether the offsets are identical.
This is a follow-up of D95238's LangRef update.
This patch updates `programUndefinedIfUndefOrPoison(V)` to return true if
`V` is used by any memory-accessing instruction.
Interestingly, this affected many tests in Attributors, mainly about adding noundefs.
The tests are updated using llvm/utils/update_test_checks.py. I checked that the diffs
are about updating noundefs.
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96642
Instcombine will convert the nonnull and alignment assumption that use the boolean condtion
to an assumption that uses the operand bundles when knowledge retention is enabled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82703
Rather than storing the query depth in AAResults, store it in AAQI.
This makes more sense, as it is a property of the query. This
sidesteps the issue of D94363, fixing slightly inaccurate AA
statistics. Additionally, I plan to use the Depth from BasicAA in
the future, where fetching it from AAResults would be unreliable.
This change is not quite as straightforward as it seems, because
we need to preserve the depth when creating a new AAQI for recursive
queries across phis. I'm adding a new method for this, as we may
need to preserve additional information here in the future.
explicitly emitting retainRV or claimRV calls in the IR
Background:
This fixes a longstanding problem where llvm breaks ARC's autorelease
optimization (see the link below) by separating calls from the marker
instructions or retainRV/claimRV calls. The backend changes are in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D92569.
https://clang.llvm.org/docs/AutomaticReferenceCounting.html#arc-runtime-objc-autoreleasereturnvalue
What this patch does to fix the problem:
- The front-end adds operand bundle "clang.arc.attachedcall" to calls,
which indicates the call is implicitly followed by a marker
instruction and an implicit retainRV/claimRV call that consumes the
call result. In addition, it emits a call to
@llvm.objc.clang.arc.noop.use, which consumes the call result, to
prevent the middle-end passes from changing the return type of the
called function. This is currently done only when the target is arm64
and the optimization level is higher than -O0.
- ARC optimizer temporarily emits retainRV/claimRV calls after the calls
with the operand bundle in the IR and removes the inserted calls after
processing the function.
- ARC contract pass emits retainRV/claimRV calls after the call with the
operand bundle. It doesn't remove the operand bundle on the call since
the backend needs it to emit the marker instruction. The retainRV and
claimRV calls are emitted late in the pipeline to prevent optimization
passes from transforming the IR in a way that makes it harder for the
ARC middle-end passes to figure out the def-use relationship between
the call and the retainRV/claimRV calls (which is the cause of
PR31925).
- The function inliner removes an autoreleaseRV call in the callee if
nothing in the callee prevents it from being paired up with the
retainRV/claimRV call in the caller. It then inserts a release call if
claimRV is attached to the call since autoreleaseRV+claimRV is
equivalent to a release. If it cannot find an autoreleaseRV call, it
tries to transfer the operand bundle to a function call in the callee.
This is important since the ARC optimizer can remove the autoreleaseRV
returning the callee result, which makes it impossible to pair it up
with the retainRV/claimRV call in the caller. If that fails, it simply
emits a retain call in the IR if retainRV is attached to the call and
does nothing if claimRV is attached to it.
- SCCP refrains from replacing the return value of a call with a
constant value if the call has the operand bundle. This ensures the
call always has at least one user (the call to
@llvm.objc.clang.arc.noop.use).
- This patch also fixes a bug in replaceUsesOfNonProtoConstant where
multiple operand bundles of the same kind were being added to a call.
Future work:
- Use the operand bundle on x86-64.
- Fix the auto upgrader to convert call+retainRV/claimRV pairs into
calls with the operand bundles.
rdar://71443534
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92808
Changes `getScalarizationOverhead` to return an invalid cost for scalable VFs
and adds some simple tests for loops containing a function for which
there is a vectorized variant available.
Reviewed By: david-arm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96356
The vector reduction intrinsics started life as experimental ops, so backend support
was lacking. As part of promoting them to 1st-class intrinsics, however, codegen
support was added/improved:
D58015
D90247
So I think it is safe to now remove this complication from IR.
Note that we still have an IR-level codegen expansion pass for these as discussed
in D95690. Removing that is another step in simplifying the logic. Also note that
x86 was already unconditionally forming reductions in IR, so there should be no
difference for x86.
I spot checked a couple of the tests here by running them through opt+llc and did
not see any asm diffs.
If we do find functional differences for other targets, it should be possible
to (at least temporarily) restore the shuffle IR with the ExpandReductions IR
pass.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96552
This patch changes the VecDesc struct to use ElementCount
instead of an unsigned VF value, in preparation for
future work that adds support for vectorized versions of
math functions using scalable vectors. Since all I'm doing
in this patch is switching the type I believe it's a
non-functional change. I changed getWidestVF to now return
both the widest fixed-width and scalable VF values, but
currently the widest scalable value will be zero.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96011
The motivation for this is that I'm looking at an example that uses shifts as induction variables. There's lots of other omissions, but one of the first I noticed is that we can't compute tight known bits. (This indirectly causes SCEV's range analysis to produce very poor results as well.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96440
This reverts commit b7d870eae7 and the
subsequent fix "[Polly] Fix build after AssumptionCache change (D96168)"
(commit e6810cab09).
It caused indeterminism in the output, such that e.g. the
polly-x86_64-linux buildbot failed accasionally.
This will be needed in the loop-vectorizer where the minimum VF
requested may be a scalable VF. getMinimumVF now takes an additional
operand 'IsScalableVF' that indicates whether a scalable VF is required.
Reviewed By: kparzysz, rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96020
The AssumptionCache mechanism is used to feed assumes into known bits computations. Most places in SCEV passed it in, but one place appears to have been missed.
Spotted via inspection, don't have a test case which actually exercises this, but it seemed like an obvious fixit.
Instcombine will convert the nonnull and alignment assumption that use the boolean condtion
to an assumption that uses the operand bundles when knowledge retention is enabled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82703
When doing some recent debugging of the IROutliner, and using the similarity pass for debugging, just having the basic block and function isn't really enough to get all the information. This adds the first and last instruction to the output of the IRSimilarityPrinting pass to give better information to a user.
Reviewer: paquette
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94304
This is based on the example/comments in:
https://llvm.org/PR48984
I tried just lifting the restriction in computeKnownBitsFromShiftOperator()
as suggested in the bug report, but that doesn't catch all of the cases
shown here. I didn't step through to see exactly why that happened. But it
seems like a reasonable compromise to cheaply check the special-case of
shifting a constant.
There's a slight regression on a cmp transform as noted, but this is likely
the more important/common pattern, so we can fix that icmp pattern later if
needed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95959
This reverts commit 502a67dd7f.
This expose a failure in test-suite build on PowerPC,
revert to unblock buildbot first,
Dave will re-commit in https://reviews.llvm.org/D96287.
Thanks Dave.
PR49043 exposed a problem when it comes to RAUW llvm.assumes. While
D96106 would fix it for GVNSink, it seems a more general concern. To
avoid future problems this patch moves away from the vector of weak
reference model used in the assumption cache. Instead, we track the
llvm.assume calls with a callback handle which will remove itself from
the cache if the call is deleted.
Fixes PR49043.
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96168
emitting retainRV or claimRV calls in the IR
This reapplies 3fe3946d9a without the
changes made to lib/IR/AutoUpgrade.cpp, which was violating layering.
Original commit message:
Background:
This patch makes changes to the front-end and middle-end that are
needed to fix a longstanding problem where llvm breaks ARC's autorelease
optimization (see the link below) by separating calls from the marker
instructions or retainRV/claimRV calls. The backend changes are in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D92569.
https://clang.llvm.org/docs/AutomaticReferenceCounting.html#arc-runtime-objc-autoreleasereturnvalue
What this patch does to fix the problem:
- The front-end adds operand bundle "clang.arc.rv" to calls, which
indicates the call is implicitly followed by a marker instruction and
an implicit retainRV/claimRV call that consumes the call result. In
addition, it emits a call to @llvm.objc.clang.arc.noop.use, which
consumes the call result, to prevent the middle-end passes from changing
the return type of the called function. This is currently done only when
the target is arm64 and the optimization level is higher than -O0.
- ARC optimizer temporarily emits retainRV/claimRV calls after the calls
with the operand bundle in the IR and removes the inserted calls after
processing the function.
- ARC contract pass emits retainRV/claimRV calls after the call with the
operand bundle. It doesn't remove the operand bundle on the call since
the backend needs it to emit the marker instruction. The retainRV and
claimRV calls are emitted late in the pipeline to prevent optimization
passes from transforming the IR in a way that makes it harder for the
ARC middle-end passes to figure out the def-use relationship between
the call and the retainRV/claimRV calls (which is the cause of
PR31925).
- The function inliner removes an autoreleaseRV call in the callee if
nothing in the callee prevents it from being paired up with the
retainRV/claimRV call in the caller. It then inserts a release call if
the call is annotated with claimRV since autoreleaseRV+claimRV is
equivalent to a release. If it cannot find an autoreleaseRV call, it
tries to transfer the operand bundle to a function call in the callee.
This is important since ARC optimizer can remove the autoreleaseRV
returning the callee result, which makes it impossible to pair it up
with the retainRV/claimRV call in the caller. If that fails, it simply
emits a retain call in the IR if the implicit call is a call to
retainRV and does nothing if it's a call to claimRV.
Future work:
- Use the operand bundle on x86-64.
- Fix the auto upgrader to convert call+retainRV/claimRV pairs into
calls annotated with the operand bundles.
rdar://71443534
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92808
emitting retainRV or claimRV calls in the IR
Background:
This patch makes changes to the front-end and middle-end that are
needed to fix a longstanding problem where llvm breaks ARC's autorelease
optimization (see the link below) by separating calls from the marker
instructions or retainRV/claimRV calls. The backend changes are in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D92569.
https://clang.llvm.org/docs/AutomaticReferenceCounting.html#arc-runtime-objc-autoreleasereturnvalue
What this patch does to fix the problem:
- The front-end adds operand bundle "clang.arc.rv" to calls, which
indicates the call is implicitly followed by a marker instruction and
an implicit retainRV/claimRV call that consumes the call result. In
addition, it emits a call to @llvm.objc.clang.arc.noop.use, which
consumes the call result, to prevent the middle-end passes from changing
the return type of the called function. This is currently done only when
the target is arm64 and the optimization level is higher than -O0.
- ARC optimizer temporarily emits retainRV/claimRV calls after the calls
with the operand bundle in the IR and removes the inserted calls after
processing the function.
- ARC contract pass emits retainRV/claimRV calls after the call with the
operand bundle. It doesn't remove the operand bundle on the call since
the backend needs it to emit the marker instruction. The retainRV and
claimRV calls are emitted late in the pipeline to prevent optimization
passes from transforming the IR in a way that makes it harder for the
ARC middle-end passes to figure out the def-use relationship between
the call and the retainRV/claimRV calls (which is the cause of
PR31925).
- The function inliner removes an autoreleaseRV call in the callee if
nothing in the callee prevents it from being paired up with the
retainRV/claimRV call in the caller. It then inserts a release call if
the call is annotated with claimRV since autoreleaseRV+claimRV is
equivalent to a release. If it cannot find an autoreleaseRV call, it
tries to transfer the operand bundle to a function call in the callee.
This is important since ARC optimizer can remove the autoreleaseRV
returning the callee result, which makes it impossible to pair it up
with the retainRV/claimRV call in the caller. If that fails, it simply
emits a retain call in the IR if the implicit call is a call to
retainRV and does nothing if it's a call to claimRV.
Future work:
- Use the operand bundle on x86-64.
- Fix the auto upgrader to convert call+retainRV/claimRV pairs into
calls annotated with the operand bundles.
rdar://71443534
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92808
getIntrinsicInstrCost takes a IntrinsicCostAttributes holding various
parameters of the intrinsic being costed. It can either be called with a
scalar intrinsic (RetTy==Scalar, VF==1), with a vector instruction
(RetTy==Vector, VF==1) or from the vectorizer with a scalar type and
vector width (RetTy==Scalar, VF>1). A RetTy==Vector, VF>1 is considered
an error. Both of the vector modes are expected to be treated the same,
but because this is confusing many backends end up getting it wrong.
Instead of trying work with those two values separately this removes the
VF parameter, widening the RetTy/ArgTys by VF used called from the
vectorizer. This keeps things simpler, but does require some other
modifications to keep things consistent.
Most backends look like this will be an improvement (or were not using
getIntrinsicInstrCost). AMDGPU needed the most changes to keep the code
from c230965ccf working. ARM removed the fix in
dfac521da1, webassembly happens to get a fixup for an SLP cost
issue and both X86 and AArch64 seem to now be using better costs from
the vectorizer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95291
MemorySSA currently treats lifetime.end intrinsics as not aliasing
anything. This breaks MemorySSA-based MemCpyOpt, because we'll happily
move a read of a pointer below a lifetime.end intrinsic, as no clobber
is reported.
I think the MemorySSA modelling here isn't correct: lifetime.end(p)
has approximately the same effect as doing a memcpy(p, undef), and
should be treated as a clobber.
This patch removes the special handling of lifetime.end, leaving
alias analysis to handle it appropriately.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95763
Extend applyLoopGuards() to take into account conditions/assumes proving some
value %v to be divisible by D by rewriting %v to (%v / D) * D. This lets the
loop unroller and the loop vectorizer identify more loops as not requiring
remainder loops.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95521
This is another step (see D95452) towards correcting fast-math-flags
bugs in vector reductions.
There are multiple bugs visible in the test diffs, and this is still
not working as it should. We still use function attributes (rather
than FMF) to drive part of the logic, but we are not checking for
the correct FP function attributes.
Note that FMF may not be propagated optimally on selects (example
in https://llvm.org/PR35607 ). That's why I'm proposing to union the
FMF of a fcmp+select pair and avoid regressions on existing vectorizer
tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95690
This is a (rather delayed) follow up to commit 0129cd5. This commit is entirely NFC, the semantic change to leverage the new information will be submitted separate with a test case.
We use `EquivalenceClasses` to cache the notion that two SCEVs are equivalent,
so save time in situation when `A` is equivalent to `B` and `B` is equivalent to `C`,
making check "if `A` is equivalent to `C`?" cheaper.
We also return `0` in the comparator when we reach max analysis depth to save
compile time. After doing this, we also cache them as being equivalent.
Now, imagine the following situation:
- `A` is proved equivalent to `B`;
- `C` is proved equivalent to `D`;
- Comparison of `A` against `D` is proved non-zero;
- Comparison of `B` against `C` reaches max depth (and gets cached as equivalence).
Now, before the invocation of compare(`B`, `C`), `A` and `D` belonged
to different equivalence classes, and their comparison returned non-zero.
After the the invocation of compare(`B`, `C`), equivalence classes get merged
and `A`, `B`, `C` and `D` all fall into the same equivalence class. So the comparator
will change its behavior for couple `A` and `D`, with weird consequences following it.
This comparator is finally used in `std::stable_sort`, and this behavior change
makes it crash (looks like it's causing a memory corruption).
Solution: this patch changes `CompareSCEVComplexity` to return `None`
when the max depth is reached. So in this case, we do not cache these SCEVs
(and their parents in the tree) as being equivalent.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94654
Reviewed By: lebedev.ri
Imported functions and variable get the visibility from the module supplying the
definition. However, non-imported definitions do not get the visibility from
(ELF) the most constraining visibility among all modules (Mach-O) the visibility
of the prevailing definition.
This patch
* adds visibility bits to GlobalValueSummary::GVFlags
* computes the result visibility and propagates it to all definitions
Protected/hidden can imply dso_local which can enable some optimizations (this
is stronger than GVFlags::DSOLocal because the implied dso_local can be
leveraged for ELF -shared while default visibility dso_local has to be cleared
for ELF -shared).
Note: we don't have summaries for declarations, so for ELF if a declaration has
the most constraining visibility, the result visibility may not be that one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92900
In computeLoadConstantCompareExitLimit, the addrec used to compute the
exit count should be from the loop which the exiting block belongs to.
Reviewed by: mkazantsev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92367
This change leverages the work done in D83743 to replay in the SampleProfile inliner to also be used in the CGSCC inliner. NOTE: currently restricted to non-ML advisors only.
The added switch `-cgscc-inline-replay=<remarks file>` will replay the inlining decisions in that file where the remarks file is generated via `-Rpass=inline`. The aim here is to make it easier to analyze changes that would modify inlining heuristics to be separated from this behavior. Doing so allows easier examination of assembly and runtime behavior compared to the baseline rather than trying to dig through the large churn caused by inlining.
In LTO compilation, since inlining is done twice you can separately specify replay by passing the flag to the FE (`-cgscc-inline-replay=`) and to the linker (`-Wl,cgscc-inline-replay=`) with the remarks generated from their respective places.
Testing on mysqld by comparing the inline decisions between base (generates remarks.txt) and diff (replay using identical input/tools with remarks.txt) and examining the inlining sites with `diff` shows 14,000 mismatches out of 247,341 for a ~94% replay accuracy. I believe this gap can be narrowed further though for the general case we may never achieve full accuracy. For my personal use, this is close enough to be representative: I set the baseline as the one generated by the replay on identical input/toolset and compare that to my modified input/toolset using the same replay.
Testing:
ninja check-llvm
newly added test correctly replays CGSCC inlining decisions
Reviewed By: mtrofin, wenlei
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94334
This is similar to D94106, but for the
isGuaranteedToTransferExecutionToSuccessor() helper. We should not
assume that readonly functions will return, as this is only true for
mustprogress functions (in which case we already infer willreturn).
As with the DCE change, for now continue assuming that readonly
intrinsics will return, as not all target intrinsics have been
annotated yet.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95288
This is to support the memory routines vec_malloc, vec_calloc, vec_realloc, and vec_free. These routines manage memory that is 16-byte aligned. And they are only available on AIX.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94710
We tend to assume that the AA pipeline is by default the default AA
pipeline and it's confusing when it's empty instead.
PR48779
Initially reverted due to BasicAA running analyses in an unspecified
order (multiple function calls as parameters), fixed by fetching
analyses before the call to construct BasicAA.
Reviewed By: asbirlea
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95117
Having a custom inliner doesn't really fit in with the new PM's
pipeline. It's also extra technical debt.
amdgpu-inline only does a couple of custom things compared to the normal
inliner:
1) It disables inlining if the number of BBs in a function would exceed
some limit
2) It increases the threshold if there are pointers to private arrays(?)
These can all be handled as TTI inliner hooks.
There already exists a hook for backends to multiply the inlining
threshold.
This way we can remove the custom amdgpu-inline pass.
This caused inline-hint.ll to fail, and after some investigation, it
looks like getInliningThresholdMultiplier() was previously getting
applied twice in amdgpu-inline (https://reviews.llvm.org/D62707 fixed it
not applying at all, so some later inliner change must have fixed
something), so I had to change the threshold in the test.
Reviewed By: rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94153
This adds cost modelling for the inloop vectorization added in
745bf6cf44. Up until now they have been modelled as the original
underlying instruction, usually an add. This happens to works OK for MVE
with instructions that are reducing into the same type as they are
working on. But MVE's instructions can perform the equivalent of an
extended MLA as a single instruction:
%sa = sext <16 x i8> A to <16 x i32>
%sb = sext <16 x i8> B to <16 x i32>
%m = mul <16 x i32> %sa, %sb
%r = vecreduce.add(%m)
->
R = VMLADAV A, B
There are other instructions for performing add reductions of
v4i32/v8i16/v16i8 into i32 (VADDV), for doing the same with v4i32->i64
(VADDLV) and for performing a v4i32/v8i16 MLA into an i64 (VMLALDAV).
The i64 are particularly interesting as there are no native i64 add/mul
instructions, leading to the i64 add and mul naturally getting very
high costs.
Also worth mentioning, under NEON there is the concept of a sdot/udot
instruction which performs a partial reduction from a v16i8 to a v4i32.
They extend and mul/sum the first four elements from the inputs into the
first element of the output, repeating for each of the four output
lanes. They could possibly be represented in the same way as above in
llvm, so long as a vecreduce.add could perform a partial reduction. The
vectorizer would then produce a combination of in and outer loop
reductions to efficiently use the sdot and udot instructions. Although
this patch does not do that yet, it does suggest that separating the
input reduction type from the produced result type is a useful concept
to model. It also shows that a MLA reduction as a single instruction is
fairly common.
This patch attempt to improve the costmodelling of in-loop reductions
by:
- Adding some pattern matching in the loop vectorizer cost model to
match extended reduction patterns that are optionally extended and/or
MLA patterns. This marks the cost of the reduction instruction correctly
and the sext/zext/mul leading up to it as free, which is otherwise
difficult to tell and may get a very high cost. (In the long run this
can hopefully be replaced by vplan producing a single node and costing
it correctly, but that is not yet something that vplan can do).
- getExtendedAddReductionCost is added to query the cost of these
extended reduction patterns.
- Expanded the ARM costs to account for these expanded sizes, which is a
fairly simple change in itself.
- Some minor alterations to allow inloop reduction larger than the highest
vector width and i64 MVE reductions.
- An extra InLoopReductionImmediateChains map was added to the vectorizer
for it to efficiently detect which instructions are reductions in the
cost model.
- The tests have some updates to show what I believe is optimal
vectorization and where we are now.
Put together this can greatly improve performance for reduction loop
under MVE.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93476
This reverts commit d97f776be5.
The original problem was due to build failures in shared lib builds. D95079
moved ImportedFunctionsInliningStatistics under Analysis, unblocking
this.
This is related to D94982. We want to call these APIs from the Analysis
component, so we can't leave them under Transforms.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95079
When using 2 InlinePass instances in the same CGSCC - one for other
mandatory inlinings, the other for the heuristic-driven ones - the order
in which the ImportedFunctionStats would be output-ed would depend on
the destruction order of the inline passes, which is not deterministic.
This patch moves the ImportedFunctionStats responsibility to the
InlineAdvisor to address this problem.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94982
Currently LLVM is relying on ValueTracking's `isKnownNonZero` to attach `nonnull`, which can return true when the value is poison.
To make the semantics of `nonnull` consistent with the behavior of `isKnownNonZero`, this makes the semantics of `nonnull` to accept poison, and return poison if the input pointer isn't null.
This makes many transformations like below legal:
```
%p = gep inbounds %x, 1 ; % p is non-null pointer or poison
call void @f(%p) ; instcombine converts this to call void @f(nonnull %p)
```
Instead, this semantics makes propagation of `nonnull` to caller illegal.
The reason is that, passing poison to `nonnull` does not immediately raise UB anymore, so such program is still well defined, if the callee does not use the argument.
Having `noundef` attribute there re-allows this.
```
define void @f(i8* %p) { ; functionattr cannot mark %p nonnull here anymore
call void @g(i8* nonnull %p) ; .. because @g never raises UB if it never uses %p.
ret void
}
```
Another attribute that needs to be updated is `align`. This patch updates the semantics of align to accept poison as well.
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90529
Just like llvm.assume, there are a lot of cases where we can just ignore llvm.experimental.noalias.scope.decl.
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93042
Split impliesPoison into two recursive walks, one over V, the
other over ValAssumedPoison. This allows us to reason about poison
implications in a number of additional cases that are important
in practice. This is a generalized form of D94859, which handles
the cmp to cmp implication in particular.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94866
83daa49758 made loop-rotate more conservative in the presence of
function calls in the prepare-for-lto stage. The code did not properly
account for calls that are no actual function calls, like calls to
intrinsics. This patch updates the code to ensure only calls that are
lowered to actual calls are considered inline candidates.
D84108 exposed a bad interaction between inlining and loop-rotation
during regular LTO, which is causing notable regressions in at least
CINT2006/473.astar.
The problem boils down to: we now rotate a loop just before the vectorizer
which requires duplicating a function call in the preheader when compiling
the individual files ('prepare for LTO'). But this then prevents further
inlining of the function during LTO.
This patch tries to resolve this issue by making LoopRotate more
conservative with respect to rotating loops that have inline-able calls
during the 'prepare for LTO' stage.
I think this change intuitively improves the current situation in
general. Loop-rotate tries hard to avoid creating headers that are 'too
big'. At the moment, it assumes all inlining already happened and the
cost of duplicating a call is equal to just doing the call. But with LTO,
inlining also happens during full LTO and it is possible that a previously
duplicated call is actually a huge function which gets inlined
during LTO.
From the perspective of LV, not much should change overall. Most loops
calling user-provided functions won't get vectorized to start with
(unless we can infer that the function does not touch memory, has no
other side effects). If we do not inline the 'inline-able' call during
the LTO stage, we merely delayed loop-rotation & vectorization. If we
inline during LTO, chances should be very high that the inlined code is
itself vectorizable or the user call was not vectorizable to start with.
There could of course be scenarios where we inline a sufficiently large
function with code not profitable to vectorize, which would have be
vectorized earlier (by scalarzing the call). But even in that case,
there probably is no big performance impact, because it should be mostly
down to the cost-model to reject vectorization in that case. And then
the version with scalarized calls should also not be beneficial. In a way,
LV should have strictly more information after inlining and make more
accurate decisions (barring cost-model issues).
There is of course plenty of room for things to go wrong unexpectedly,
so we need to keep a close look at actual performance and address any
follow-up issues.
I took a look at the impact on statistics for
MultiSource/SPEC2000/SPEC2006. There are a few benchmarks with fewer
loops rotated, but no change to the number of loops vectorized.
Reviewed By: sanwou01
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94232