Splitting basic blocks into multiple statements if there are now
additional scalar dependencies gives more freedom to the scheduler, but
more statements also means higher compile-time complexity. Switch to
finer statement granularity, the additional compile time should be
limited by the number of operations quota.
The regression tests are written for the -polly-stmt-granularity=bb
setting, therefore we add that flag to those tests that break with the
new default. Some of the tests only fail because the statements are
named differently due to a basic block resulting in multiple statements,
but which are removed during simplification of statements without
side-effects. Previous commits tried to reduce this effect, but it is
not completely avoidable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42151
llvm-svn: 324169
Before this patch, ScopInfo::getValueDef(SAI) used
getStmtFor(Instruction*) to find the MemoryAccess that writes a
MemoryKind::Value. In cases where the value is synthesizable within the
statement that defines, the instruction is not added to the statement's
instruction list, which means getStmtFor() won't return anything.
If the synthesiable instruction is not synthesiable in a different
statement (due to being defined in a loop that and ScalarEvolution
cannot derive its escape value), we still need a MemoryKind::Value
and a write to it that makes it available in the other statements.
Introduce a separate map for this purpose.
This fixes MultiSource/Benchmarks/MallocBench/cfrac where
-polly-simplify could not find the writing MemoryAccess for a use. The
write was not marked as required and consequently was removed.
Because this could in principle happen as well for PHI scalars,
add such a map for PHI reads as well.
llvm-svn: 313881