Summary:
This is much cleaner, and fits the same structure as many other tablegen backends. This was not done originally as the CRTP in the pass classes made it overly verbose/complex.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77367
This revision removes all of the CRTP from the pass hierarchy in preparation for using the tablegen backend instead. This creates a much cleaner interface in the C++ code, and naturally fits with the rest of the infrastructure. A new utility class, PassWrapper, is added to replicate the existing behavior for passes not suitable for using the tablegen backend.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77350
This revision adds support for generating utilities for passes such as options/statistics/etc. that can be inferred from the tablegen definition. This removes additional boilerplate from the pass, and also makes it easier to remove the reliance on the pass registry to provide certain things(e.g. the pass argument).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76659
This will greatly simplify a number of things related to passes:
* Enables generation of pass registration
* Enables generation of boiler plate pass utilities
* Enables generation of pass documentation
This revision focuses on adding the basic structure and adds support for generating the registration for passes in the Transforms/ directory. Future revisions will add more support and move more passes over.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76656
HasNoSideEffect can now be implemented using the MemoryEffectInterface, removing the need to check multiple things for the same information. This also removes an easy foot-gun for users as 'Operation::hasNoSideEffect' would ignore operations that dynamically, or recursively, have no side effects. This also leads to an immediate improvement in some of the existing users, such as DCE, now that they have access to more information.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76036
These terminator operations don't really have any side effects, and this allows for more accurate side-effect analysis for region operations. For example, currently we can't detect like a loop.for or affine.for are dead because the affine.terminator is "side effecting".
Note: Marking as NoSideEffect doesn't mean that these operations can be opaquely erased.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75888
Summary: The new internal representation of operation results now allows for accessing the result types to be more efficient. Changing the API to ArrayRef is more efficient and removes the need to explicitly materialize vectors in several places.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73429
Statistics are a way to keep track of what the compiler is doing and how effective various optimizations are. It is useful to see what optimizations are contributing to making a particular program run faster. Pass-instance specific statistics take this even further as you can see the effect of placing a particular pass at specific places within the pass pipeline, e.g. they could help answer questions like "what happens if I run CSE again here".
Statistics can be added to a pass by simply adding members of type 'Pass::Statistics'. This class takes as a constructor arguments: the parent pass pointer, a name, and a description. Statistics can be dumped by the pass manager in a similar manner to how pass timing information is dumped, i.e. via PassManager::enableStatistics programmatically; or -pass-statistics and -pass-statistics-display via the command line pass manager options.
Below is an example:
struct MyPass : public OperationPass<MyPass> {
Statistic testStat{this, "testStat", "A test statistic"};
void runOnOperation() {
...
++testStat;
...
}
};
$ mlir-opt -pass-pipeline='func(my-pass,my-pass)' foo.mlir -pass-statistics
Pipeline Display:
===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===
... Pass statistics report ...
===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===
'func' Pipeline
MyPass
(S) 15 testStat - A test statistic
MyPass
(S) 6 testStat - A test statistic
List Display:
===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===
... Pass statistics report ...
===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===
MyPass
(S) 21 testStat - A test statistic
PiperOrigin-RevId: 284022014
This allows for them to be used on other non-function, or even other function-like, operations. The algorithms are already generic, so this is simply changing the derived pass type. The majority of this change is just ensuring that the nesting of these passes remains the same, as the pass manager won't auto-nest them anymore.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 276573038
Switch to C++14 standard method as llvm::make_unique has been removed (
https://reviews.llvm.org/D66259). Also mark some targets as c++14 to ease next
integrates.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 263953918
Since raw pointers are always passed around for IR construct without
implying any ownership transfer, it can be error prone to have implicit
ownership transferred the same way.
For example this code can seem harmless:
Pass *pass = ....
pm.addPass(pass);
pm.addPass(pass);
pm.run(module);
PiperOrigin-RevId: 263053082
These methods will allow replacing the uses of results with an existing operation, with the same number of results, or a range of values. This removes a number of hand-rolled result replacement loops and simplifies replacement for operations with multiple results.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 262206600
a pointer. This makes it consistent with all the other methods in
FunctionPass, as well as with ModulePass::getModule(). NFC.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 240257910
- change this for consistency - everything else similar takes/returns a
Function pointer - the FuncBuilder ctor,
Block/Value/Instruction::getFunction(), etc.
- saves a whole bunch of &s everywhere
PiperOrigin-RevId: 236928761
An analysis can be any class, but it must provide the following:
* A constructor for a given IR unit.
struct MyAnalysis {
// Compute this analysis with the provided module.
MyAnalysis(Module *module);
};
Analyses can be accessed from a Pass by calling either the 'getAnalysisResult<AnalysisT>' or 'getCachedAnalysisResult<AnalysisT>' methods. A FunctionPass may query for a cached analysis on the parent module with 'getCachedModuleAnalysisResult'. Similary, a ModulePass may query an analysis, it doesn't need to be cached, on a child function with 'getFunctionAnalysisResult'.
By default, when running a pass all cached analyses are set to be invalidated. If no transformation was performed, a pass can use the method 'markAllAnalysesPreserved' to preserve all analysis results. As noted above, preserving specific analyses is not yet supported.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 236505642
on this to merge together the classes, but there may be other simplification
possible. I'll leave that to riverriddle@ as future work.
This is step 29/n towards merging instructions and statements.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 227328680
consistent and moving the using declarations over. Hopefully this is the last
truly massive patch in this refactoring.
This is step 21/n towards merging instructions and statements, NFC.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 227178245
The last major renaming is Statement -> Instruction, which is why Statement and
Stmt still appears in various places.
This is step 19/n towards merging instructions and statements, NFC.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 227163082
This *only* changes the internal data structures, it does not affect the user visible syntax or structure of MLIR code. Function gets new "isCFG()" sorts of predicates as a transitional measure.
This patch is gross in a number of ways, largely in an effort to reduce the amount of mechanical churn in one go. It introduces a bunch of using decls to keep the old names alive for now, and a bunch of stuff needs to be renamed.
This is step 10/n towards merging instructions and statements, NFC.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 227044402
The algorithm collects defining operations within a scoped hash table. The scopes within the hash table correspond to nodes within the dominance tree for a function. This cl only adds support for simple operations, i.e non side-effecting. Such operations, e.g. load/store/call, will be handled in later patches.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 223811328