Before this change the user only saw "Unspecified Error", when a region
contained the entry block. Now we report:
"Scop contains function entry (not yet supported)."
llvm-svn: 293169
Before this change we created an additional reload in the copy of the incoming
block of a PHI node to reload the incoming value, even though the necessary
value has already been made available by the normally generated scalar loads.
In this change, we drop the code that generates this redundant reload and
instead just reuse the scalar value already available.
Besides making the generated code slightly cleaner, this change also makes sure
that scalar loads go through the normal logic, which means they can be remapped
(e.g. to array slots) and corresponding code is generated to load from the
remapped location. Without this change, the original scalar load at the
beginning of the non-affine region would have been remapped, but the redundant
scalar load would continue to load from the old PHI slot location.
It might be possible to further simplify the code in addOperandToPHI,
but this would not only mean to pull out getNewValue, but to also change the
insertion point update logic. As this did not work when trying it the first
time, this change is likely not trivial. To not introduce bugs last minute, we
postpone further simplications to a subsequent commit.
We also document the current behavior a little bit better.
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28892
llvm-svn: 292486
Making certain values 'const' to just cast it away a little later mainly
obfuscates the code. Hence, we just drop the 'const' parts.
Suggested-by: Michael Kruse <llvm@meinersbur.de>
llvm-svn: 292480
We rename the test case with -metarenamer to make the variable names easier to
read and add additional check lines that verify the code we currently generate
for PHI nodes. This code is interesting as it contains a PHI node in a
non-affine sub-region, where some incoming blocks are within the non-affine
sub-region and others are outside of the non-affine subregion.
As can be seen in the check lines we currently load the PHI-node value twice.
This commit documents this behavior. In a subsequent patch we will try to
improve this.
llvm-svn: 292470
Summary:
Instead of forbidding such access functions completely, we verify that their
base pointer has been hoisted and only assert in case the base pointer was
not hoisted.
I was trying for a little while to get a test case that ensures the assert is
correctly fired in case of invariant load hoisting being disabled, but I could
not find a good way to do so, as llvm-lit immediately aborts if a command
yields a non-zero return value. As we do not generally test our asserts,
not having a test case here seems OK.
This resolves http://llvm.org/PR31494
Suggested-by: Michael Kruse <llvm@meinersbur.de>
Reviewers: efriedma, jdoerfert, Meinersbur, gareevroman, sebpop, zinob, huihuiz, pollydev
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28798
llvm-svn: 292213
Move the function getFirstNonBoxedLoopFor which is used in ScopBuilder
and in ScopInfo to Support/ScopHelpers to make it reusable in other
locations. No functionality change.
Patch by Sameer Abu Asal.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28754
llvm-svn: 292168
This feature is currently not supported and an explicit assert to prevent the
introduction of such accesses has been added in r282893. This test case allows
to reproduce the assert (and without the assert the miscompile) added in
r282893. It will help when adding such support at some point.
llvm-svn: 292147
Before this change, this code has been mixed with a check for non-affine
loops (and when originally introduce was also duplicated). By creating
a separate loop and explicitly documenting this property, the current
behavior becomes a lot more clear.
llvm-svn: 292140
The loop body in buildAliasGroups is still too large to easily scan it. Hence,
we split the loop body out into a separate function to improve readability.
llvm-svn: 292138
Instead of modifying the original alias group and repurposing it as read-write
access group when splitting accesses in read-only and read-write accesses, we
just keep all three groups: the original alias group, the set of read-only
accesses and the set of read-write accesses. This allows us to remove some
complicated iterator handling and also allows for more code-reuse in
calculateMinMaxAccess.
llvm-svn: 292137
It seems over time we added an additional map that maps from the base address
of a read-only access to the actual access. However this map is never used.
Drop the creation and use of this map to simplify our alias check generation
code.
llvm-svn: 292126
The alias group will anyhow be cleared at the end of this function and is not
used afterwards. We avoid an explicit clear() call at multiple places to
improve readability of this code.
llvm-svn: 292125
Hoisting small vectors out of a loop seems to be a pure performance
optimization, which is unlikely to have great impact in practice. As this
hoisting just increases code-complexity, we fold the SmallVectors back into
the loop.
In subsequent commits, we will further simplify and structure this code, but
we committed this change separately to provide an explanation to make clear
that we purposefully reverted this optimization.
llvm-svn: 292122
The function buildAliasGroups got very large. We extract out the splitting
of alias groups to reduce its size and to better document the current behavior.
llvm-svn: 292121
The function buildAliasGroups got very large. We extract out the actual
construction of alias groups to reduce its size and to better document the
current behavior.
llvm-svn: 292120
There is no point in regularly committing a binary file to the repository, as
this just unnecessarily increases the repository size. Interested people can
find the isl manual for example at isl.gforge.inria.fr/manual.pdf.
llvm-svn: 292105
To benefit of the type safety guarantees of C++11 typed enums, which would have
caught the type mismatch fixed in r291960, we make MemoryKind a typed enum.
This change also allows us to drop the 'MK_' prefix and to instead use the more
descriptive full name of the enum as prefix. To reduce the amount of typing
needed, we use this opportunity to move MemoryKind from ScopArrayInfo to a
global scope, which means the ScopArrayInfo:: prefix is not needed. This move
also makes historically sense. In the beginning of Polly we had different
MemoryKind enums in both MemoryAccess and ScopArrayInfo, which were later
canonicalized to one. During this canonicalization we just choose the enum in
ScopArrayInfo, but did not consider to move this shared enum to global scope.
Reviewed-by: Michael Kruse <llvm@meinersbur.de>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28090
llvm-svn: 292030
Instead of a plain 'int' we use the correct enum type. This does not give
us type safety yet, but at least makes the code more correct in terms of typing.
To avoid such mismatches it might sense to switch these enums to C++11 typed
enums.
llvm-svn: 291960
This update improves isl's ability to coalesce different convex sets/maps,
especially when the contain existentially quantified variables.
llvm-svn: 290538
If the parameters of the target cache (i.e., cache level sizes, cache level
associativities) are not specified or have wrong values, we use ones for
parameters of the macro-kernel and do not perform data-layout optimizations of
the matrix multiplication. In this patch we specify the default values of the
cache parameters to be able to apply the pattern matching optimizations even in
this case. Since there is no typical values of this parameters, we use the
parameters of Intel Core i7-3820 SandyBridge that also help to attain the
high-performance on IBM POWER System S822 and IBM Power 730 Express server.
Reviewed-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28090
llvm-svn: 290518
Typically processor architectures do not include an L3 cache, which means that
Nc, the parameter of the micro-kernel, is, for all practical purposes,
redundant ([1]). However, its small values can cause the redundant packing of
the same elements of the matrix A, the first operand of the matrix
multiplication. At the same time, big values of the parameter Nc can cause
segmentation faults in case the available stack is exceeded.
This patch adds an option to specify the parameter Nc as a multiple of
the parameter of the micro-kernel Nr.
In case of Intel Core i7-3820 SandyBridge and the following options,
clang -O3 gemm.c -I utilities/ utilities/polybench.c -DPOLYBENCH_TIME
-march=native -mllvm -polly -mllvm -polly-pattern-matching-based-opts=true
-DPOLYBENCH_USE_SCALAR_LB -mllvm -polly-target-cache-level-associativity=8,8
-mllvm -polly-target-cache-level-sizes=32768,262144 -mllvm
-polly-target-latency-vector-fma=8
it helps to improve the performance from 11.303 GFlops/sec (39,247% of
theoretical peak) to 17.896 GFlops/sec (62,14% of theoretical peak).
Refs.:
[1] - http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/flame/pubs/TOMS-BLIS-Analytical.pdf
Reviewed-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28019
llvm-svn: 290256
Aligning data to cache lines boundaries helps to avoid overheads related to
an access to it ([1]). This patch aligns newly created arrays and adds an
option to specify the first level cache line size. By default we use 64 bytes,
which is a typical cache-line size ([2]).
In case of Intel Core i7-3820 SandyBridge and the following options,
clang -O3 gemm.c -I utilities/ utilities/polybench.c -DPOLYBENCH_TIME
-march=native -mllvm -polly -mllvm -polly-pattern-matching-based-opts=true
-DPOLYBENCH_USE_SCALAR_LB -mllvm -polly-target-cache-level-associativity=8,8
-mllvm -polly-target-cache-level-sizes=32768,262144 -mllvm
-polly-target-latency-vector-fma=8
it helps to improve the performance from 11.303 GFlops/sec (39,247% of
theoretical peak) to 12.63 GFlops/sec (43,8542% of theoretical peak).
Refs.:
[1] - http://www.alexonlinux.com/aligned-vs-unaligned-memory-access
[2] - http://igoro.com/archive/gallery-of-processor-cache-effects/
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28020
Reviewed-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
llvm-svn: 290253
multiplication
Previously we had two-dimensional accesses to store packed operands of
the matrix multiplication for the sake of simplicity of the packed arrays.
However, addition of the third dimension helps to simplify the corresponding
memory access, reduce the execution time of isl operations applied to it, and
consequently reduce the compile-time of Polly. For example, in case of
Intel Core i7-3820 SandyBridge and the following options,
clang -O3 gemm.c -I utilities/ utilities/polybench.c -DPOLYBENCH_TIME
-march=native -mllvm -polly -mllvm -polly-pattern-matching-based-opts=true
-DPOLYBENCH_USE_SCALAR_LB -mllvm -polly-target-cache-level-associativity=8,8
-mllvm -polly-target-cache-level-sizes=32768,262144 -mllvm
-polly-target-latency-vector-fma=7
it helps to reduce the compile-time from about 361.456 seconds to about 0.816
seconds.
Reviewed-by: Michael Kruse <llvm@meinersbur.de>,
Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27878
llvm-svn: 290251