Commit Graph

193 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
David Blaikie 7a9b788830 GlobalsModRef: Ensure optnone+readonly/readnone attributes are respected
llvm-svn: 304945
2017-06-07 21:37:39 +00:00
Alina Sbirlea 33e5872367 [mssa] Fix case when there is no definition in a block prior to an inserted use.
Summary:
Check that the first access before one being tested is valid.
Before this patch, if there was no definition prior to the Use being tested,
the first time Iter was deferenced, it hit the sentinel.

Reviewers: dberlin, gbiv

Subscribers: sanjoy, Prazek, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33950

llvm-svn: 304926
2017-06-07 16:46:53 +00:00
David Blaikie c662b50150 GlobalsModRef+OptNone: Don't prove readnone/other properties from an optnone function
Seems like at least one reasonable interpretation of optnone is that the
optimizer never "looks inside" a function. This fix is consistent with
that interpretation.

Specifically this came up in the situation:

f3 calls f2 calls f1
f2 is always_inline
f1 is optnone

The application of readnone to f1 (& thus to f2) caused the inliner to
kill the call to f2 as being trivially dead (without even checking the
cost function, as it happens - not sure if that's also a bug).

llvm-svn: 304833
2017-06-06 20:51:15 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 9a67b07398 Re-sort #include lines for unittests. This uses a slightly modified
clang-format (https://reviews.llvm.org/D33932) to keep primary headers
at the top and handle new utility headers like 'gmock' consistently with
other utility headers.

No other change was made. I did no manual edits, all of this is
clang-format.

This should allow other changes to have more clear and focused diffs,
and is especially motivated by moving some headers into more focused
libraries.

llvm-svn: 304786
2017-06-06 11:06:56 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer c1f5ae236c [OrderedBasicBlock] Return false for comesBefore(A, A)
So far it would return true for the first uncached query, then cached
queries return false.

llvm-svn: 304545
2017-06-02 13:10:31 +00:00
Gor Nishanov e5d2911856 ScalarEvolution unit test: fix typo that breaks check-all
llvm-svn: 304063
2017-05-27 05:24:30 +00:00
Keno Fischer 090f1959c1 [SCEVExpander] Try harder to avoid introducing inttoptr
Summary:
This fixes introduction of an incorrect inttoptr/ptrtoint pair in
the included test case which makes use of non-integral pointers. I
suspect there are more cases like this left, but this takes care of
the one I was seeing at the moment.

Reviewers: sanjoy

Subscribers: mzolotukhin, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33129

llvm-svn: 304058
2017-05-27 03:22:55 +00:00
Xin Tong 9fbfeefadf Revert "Add pthread_self function prototype and make it speculatable."
This reverts commit 143d7445b5dfa2f6d6c45bdbe0433d9fc531be21.

Build breaking

llvm-svn: 303496
2017-05-21 00:37:55 +00:00
Xin Tong 75af3af957 Add pthread_self function prototype and make it speculatable.
Summary: This allows pthread_self to be pulled out of a loop by LICM.

Reviewers: hfinkel, arsenm, davide

Reviewed By: davide

Subscribers: davide, wdng, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32782

llvm-svn: 303495
2017-05-20 22:40:25 +00:00
Easwaran Raman dadc0f11ad Add hasProfileSummary and has{Sample|Instrumentation}Profile methods
ProfileSummaryInfo already checks whether the module has sample profile
in determining profile counts. This will also be useful in inliner to
clean up threshold updates.

llvm-svn: 303204
2017-05-16 20:14:39 +00:00
Andrew Kaylor 3cd8c16d7f [TLI] Add declarations for various math header file routines from math-finite.h that create '__<func>_finite as functions
Patch by Chris Chrulski

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31787

llvm-svn: 302955
2017-05-12 22:11:12 +00:00
Teresa Johnson 2a6b7991d4 Restrict call metadata based hotness detection to Sample PGO mode
Summary:
Don't use the metadata on call instructions for determining hotness
unless we are in sample PGO mode, where it is needed because profile
counts are not accurate. In instrumentation mode this is not necessary
and does more harm than good when calls have VP metadata that hasn't
been properly scaled after transformations or dropped after constant
prop based devirtualization (both should be fixed, but we don't need
to do this in the first place for instrumentation PGO).

This required adjusting a number of tests to distinguish between sample
and instrumentation PGO handling, and to add in profile summary metadata
so that getProfileCount can get the summary.

Reviewers: davidxl, danielcdh

Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, mehdi_amini, Prazek, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32877

llvm-svn: 302844
2017-05-11 23:18:05 +00:00
Matthias Braun 60b40b8fec TargetLibraryInfo: Introduce wcslen
wcslen is part of the C99 and C++98 standards.

- This introduces the function to TargetLibraryInfo.
- Also set attributes for wcslen in llvm::inferLibFuncAttributes().

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32837

llvm-svn: 302278
2017-05-05 20:25:50 +00:00
Sanjoy Das bbebcb6c4d Teach SCEV normalization to de/normalize non-affine add recs
Summary:
Before this change, SCEV Normalization would incorrectly normalize
non-affine add recurrences.  To work around this there was (still is)
a check in place to make sure we only tried to normalize affine add
recurrences.

We recently found a bug in aforementioned check to bail out of
normalizing non-affine add recurrences.  However, instead of fixing
the bailout, I have decided to teach SCEV normalization to work
correctly with non-affine add recurrences, making the bailout
unnecessary (I'll remove it in a subsequent change).

I've also added some unit tests (which would have failed before this
change).

Reviewers: atrick, sunfish, efriedma

Reviewed By: atrick

Subscribers: mcrosier, mzolotukhin, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32104

llvm-svn: 301281
2017-04-25 00:09:19 +00:00
Wei Mi 8c4053372e [SCEV] Add a local cache for getZeroExtendExpr and getSignExtendExpr to prevent
the exponential behavior.

The patch is to fix PR32043. Functions getZeroExtendExpr and getSignExtendExpr
may call themselves recursively more than once. This is potentially a 2^N
complexity behavior. The exponential behavior was not commonly exposed before
because of existing global cache mechnism like UniqueSCEVs or some early return
mechanism when flags FlagNSW or FlagNUW are seen. However, we still have case
which can expose the exponential behavior, like the case in PR32043, so we add
a local cache in getZeroExtendExpr and getSignExtendExpr. If the input of the
functions -- SCEV and type pair have been seen before, we can find the extended
expression directly in the local cache.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30350

llvm-svn: 300494
2017-04-17 20:40:05 +00:00
Sanjoy Das 044f956f9a Generalize SCEV's unit testing helper a bit
llvm-svn: 300379
2017-04-14 23:47:53 +00:00
Craig Topper 8580cd4e1a [ValueTracking] Avoid undefined behavior in unittest by not making a named ArrayRef from a std::initializer_list
One of the ValueTracking unittests creates a named ArrayRef initialized by a std::initializer_list. The underlying array for an std::initializer_list is only guaranteed to have a lifetime as long as the initializer_list object itself. So this can leave the ArrayRef pointing at an array that no long exists.

This fixes this to just create an explicit array instead of an ArrayRef.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32089

llvm-svn: 300354
2017-04-14 17:59:19 +00:00
Sanjoy Das b600d3f2c4 Add a unit test for SCEV Normalization
llvm-svn: 300332
2017-04-14 15:50:04 +00:00
Daniel Berlin 554dcd8c89 MemorySSA: Move to Analysis, from Transforms/Utils. It's used as
Analysis, it has Analysis passes, and once NewGVN is made an Analysis,
this removes the cross dependency from Analysis to Transform/Utils.
NFC.

llvm-svn: 299980
2017-04-11 20:06:36 +00:00
Matt Arsenault 3c1fc768ed Allow DataLayout to specify addrspace for allocas.
LLVM makes several assumptions about address space 0. However,
alloca is presently constrained to always return this address space.
There's no real way to avoid using alloca, so without this
there is no way to opt out of these assumptions.

The problematic assumptions include:
- That the pointer size used for the stack is the same size as
  the code size pointer, which is also the maximum sized pointer.

- That 0 is an invalid, non-dereferencable pointer value.

These are problems for AMDGPU because alloca is used to
implement the private address space, which uses a 32-bit
index as the pointer value. Other pointers are 64-bit
and behave more like LLVM's notion of generic address
space. By changing the address space used for allocas,
we can change our generic pointer type to be LLVM's generic
pointer type which does have similar properties.

llvm-svn: 299888
2017-04-10 22:27:50 +00:00
Simon Pilgrim bd83f83b56 Fix signed/unsigned comparison warnings
llvm-svn: 297561
2017-03-11 13:02:31 +00:00
Dehao Chen c2048155a0 Refactor the PSI to extract getCallSiteCount and remove checks for profile type.
Summary: There is no need to check profile count as only CallInst will have metadata attached.

Reviewers: eraman

Reviewed By: eraman

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30799

llvm-svn: 297500
2017-03-10 19:45:16 +00:00
Sanjoy Das 1bd479dd5c [SCEV] Decrease the recursion threshold for CompareValueComplexity
Fixes PR32142.

r287232 accidentally increased the recursion threshold for
CompareValueComplexity from 2 to 32.  This change reverses that change
by introducing a separate flag for CompareValueComplexity's threshold.

llvm-svn: 296992
2017-03-05 23:49:17 +00:00
Sanjoy Das 4897cea4ed Fix signed-unsigned comparison warning
llvm-svn: 296274
2017-02-25 22:25:48 +00:00
Sanjoy Das 39a684d117 [ValueTracking] Don't do an unchecked shift in ComputeNumSignBits
Summary:
Previously we used to return a bogus result, 0, for IR like `ashr %val,
-1`.

I've also added an assert checking that `ComputeNumSignBits` at least
returns 1.  That assert found an already checked in test case where we
were returning a bad result for `ashr %val, -1`.

Fixes PR32045.

Reviewers: spatel, majnemer

Reviewed By: spatel, majnemer

Subscribers: efriedma, mcrosier, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30311

llvm-svn: 296273
2017-02-25 20:30:45 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 1f8fcfeac5 [PM/LCG] Teach LCG to support spurious reference edges.
Somewhat amazingly, this only requires teaching it to clean them up when
deleting a dead function from the graph. And we already have exactly the
necessary data structures to do that in the parent RefSCCs.

This allows ArgPromote to work in a much simpler way be merely letting
reference edges linger in the graph after the causing IR is deleted. We
will clean up these edges when we run any function pass over the IR, but
don't remove them eagerly.

This avoids all of the quadratic update issues both in the current pass
manager and in my previous attempt with the new pass manager.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29579

llvm-svn: 294663
2017-02-09 23:30:14 +00:00
Chandler Carruth aaad9f84be [PM/LCG] Teach the LazyCallGraph how to replace a function without
disturbing the graph or having to update edges.

This is motivated by porting argument promotion to the new pass manager.
Because of how LLVM IR Function objects work, in order to change their
signature a new object needs to be created. This is efficient and
straight forward in the IR but previously was very hard to implement in
LCG. We could easily replace the function a node in the graph
represents. The challenging part is how to handle updating the edges in
the graph.

LCG previously used an edge to a raw function to represent a node that
had not yet been scanned for calls and references. This was the core
of its laziness. However, that model causes this kind of update to be
very hard:
1) The keys to lookup an edge need to be `Function*`s that would all
   need to be updated when we update the node.
2) There will be some unknown number of edges that haven't transitioned
   from `Function*` edges to `Node*` edges.

All of this complexity isn't necessary. Instead, we can always build
a node around any function, always pointing edges at it and always using
it as the key to lookup an edge. To maintain the laziness, we need to
sink the *edges* of a node into a secondary object and explicitly model
transitioning a node from empty to populated by scanning the function.
This design seems much cleaner in a number of ways, but importantly
there is now exactly *one* place where the `Function*` has to be
updated!

Some other cleanups that fall out of this include having something to
model the *entry* edges more accurately. Rather than hand rolling parts
of the node in the graph itself, we have an explicit `EdgeSequence`
object that gives us exactly the functionality needed. We also have
a consistent place to define the edge iterators and can use them for
both the entry edges and the internal edges of the graph.

The API used to model the separation between a node and its edges is
intentionally very thin as most clients are expected to deal with nodes
that have populated edges. We model this exactly as an optional does
with an additional method to populate the edges when that is
a reasonable thing for a client to do. This is based on API design
suggestions from Richard Smith and David Blaikie, credit goes to them
for helping pick how to model this without it being either too explicit
or too implicit.

The patch is somewhat noisy due to shifting around iterator types and
new syntax for walking the edges of a node, but most of the
functionality change is in the `Edge`, `EdgeSequence`, and `Node` types.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29577

llvm-svn: 294653
2017-02-09 23:24:13 +00:00
Chandler Carruth cd07efc793 [SCEV] Scale back the test added in r294181 as it goes quadratic in
SCEV.

This test was immediately the slowest test in 'check-llvm' even in an
optimized build and was driving up the total test time by 50% for me.

Sanjoy has filed a PR about the quadratic behavior in SCEV but it is
also concerning that the test still passes given that r294181 added
a threshold at 32 to SCEV. I've followed up on the original patch to
figure out how this test should work long-term, but for now I want to
get check-llvm to be fast again.

llvm-svn: 294241
2017-02-06 21:27:12 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 2e0fe3e65b [PM/LCG] Remove the lazy RefSCC formation from the LazyCallGraph during
iteration.

The lazy formation of RefSCCs isn't really the most important part of
the laziness here -- that has to do with walking the functions
themselves -- and isn't essential to maintain. Originally, there were
incremental update algorithms that relied on updates happening
predominantly near the most recent RefSCC formed, but those have been
replaced with ones that have much tighter general case bounds at this
point. We do still perform asserts that only scale well due to this
incrementality, but those are easy to place behind EXPENSIVE_CHECKS.

Removing this simplifies the entire analysis by having a single up-front
step that builds all of the RefSCCs in a direct Tarjan walk. We can even
easily replace this with other or better algorithms at will and with
much less confusion now that there is no iterator-based incremental
logic involved. This removes a lot of complexity from LCG.

Another advantage of moving in this direction is that it simplifies
testing the system substantially as we no longer have to worry about
observing and mutating the graph half-way through the RefSCC formation.

We still need a somewhat special iterator for RefSCCs because we want
the iterator to remain stable in the face of graph updates. However,
this now merely involves relative indexing to the current RefSCC's
position in the sequence which isn't too hard.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29381

llvm-svn: 294227
2017-02-06 19:38:06 +00:00
Daniil Fukalov 6378bdb2dd [SCEV] limit recursion depth and operands number in getAddExpr
for a quite big function with source like

%add = add nsw i32 %mul, %conv
%mul1 = mul nsw i32 %add, %conv
%add2 = add nsw i32 %mul1, %add
%mul3 = mul nsw i32 %add2, %add
; repeat couple of thousands times
that can be produced by loop unroll, getAddExpr() tries to recursively construct SCEV and runs almost infinite time.

Added recursion depth restriction (with new parameter to set it)

Reviewers: sanjoy

Subscribers: hfinkel, llvm-commits, mzolotukhin

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28158

llvm-svn: 294181
2017-02-06 12:38:06 +00:00
David L. Jones d21529fa0d [Analysis] Add LibFunc_ prefix to enums in TargetLibraryInfo. (NFC)
Summary:
The LibFunc::Func enum holds enumerators named for libc functions.
Unfortunately, there are real situations, including libc implementations, where
function names are actually macros (musl uses "#define fopen64 fopen", for
example; any other transitively visible macro would have similar effects).

Strictly speaking, a conforming C++ Standard Library should provide any such
macros as functions instead (via <cstdio>). However, there are some "library"
functions which are not part of the standard, and thus not subject to this
rule (fopen64, for example). So, in order to be both portable and consistent,
the enum should not use the bare function names.

The old enum naming used a namespace LibFunc and an enum Func, with bare
enumerators. This patch changes LibFunc to be an enum with enumerators prefixed
with "LibFFunc_". (Unfortunately, a scoped enum is not sufficient to override
macros.)

There are additional changes required in clang.

Reviewers: rsmith

Subscribers: mehdi_amini, mzolotukhin, nemanjai, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28476

llvm-svn: 292848
2017-01-23 23:16:46 +00:00
Chandler Carruth f002264d49 [LoopInfo] Add helper methods to compute two useful orderings of the
loops in a function.

These are relatively confusing to talk about and compute correctly so it
seems really good to write down their implementation in one place. I've
replaced one place we needed this in the loop PM infrastructure and
I have another place in a pending patch that wants it.

We can't quite use this for the core loop PM walk because there we're
sometimes working on a sub-forest.

I'll add the expected unittests before committing this but wanted to
make sure folks were happy with these names / comments.

Credit goes to Richard Smith for the idea for naming the order where siblings
are in reverse program order but the tree traversal remains preorder.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28932

llvm-svn: 292569
2017-01-20 02:41:20 +00:00
Easwaran Raman 6c8f511f82 Add an interface to scale the frequencies of a set of blocks.
The scaling is done with reference to the the new frequency of a reference block.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28535

llvm-svn: 292507
2017-01-19 18:53:16 +00:00
Xin Tong 43c1a26400 Refactor out LoopInfo computation so that it can be used by
other test cases.

Summary: Refactor out LoopInfo computation so that it can be
used by other test cases.

So i am changing this test proactively for later commit, which will use
this function.

Reviewers: sanjoy, hfinkel

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28778

llvm-svn: 292250
2017-01-17 20:24:39 +00:00
Ahmed Bougacha 6b9be1dbe1 [TLI] Add prototype checking for all remaining LibFuncs.
This is another step towards unifying all LibFunc prototype checks.
This work started in r267758 (D19469);  add the remaining checks.

Also add a unittest that checks each libfunc declared with a known-valid
and known-invalid prototype.  New libfuncs added in the future are
required to have prototype checking in place; the known-valid test will
fail otherwise.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28030

llvm-svn: 292188
2017-01-17 03:10:02 +00:00
Ahmed Bougacha 1539d1de75 [unittests] Alphabetize cmake file list. NFC.
llvm-svn: 292186
2017-01-17 03:09:55 +00:00
Xin Tong 5060fe9dc0 Empty line. NFC.
llvm-svn: 292081
2017-01-15 23:32:11 +00:00
Xin Tong ca02360f46 Use getLoopLatch in place of isLoopSimplifyForm
Summary:
Use getLoopLatch in place of isLoopSimplifyForm. we do not need
to know whether the loop has a preheader nor dedicated exits.

Reviewers: hfinkel, sanjoy, atrick, mkuper

Subscribers: mzolotukhin, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28724

llvm-svn: 292078
2017-01-15 21:17:52 +00:00
Xin Tong b0d60574ff Delete a dead argument. NFC
llvm-svn: 292074
2017-01-15 19:53:59 +00:00
Easwaran Raman a7bdb8a513 Compute summary before calling extractProfTotalWeight
extractProfTotalWeight checks if the profile type is sample profile, but
before that we have to ensure that summary is available. Also expanded
the unittest to test the case where there is no summar

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28708

llvm-svn: 291982
2017-01-14 00:32:37 +00:00
Easwaran Raman b035f914e4 ProfileSummaryInfo improvements.
* Add is{Hot|Cold}CallSite methods
* Fix a bug in isHotBB where it was looking for MD_prof on a return instruction
* Use MD_prof data only if sample profiling was used to collect profiles.
* Add an unit test to ProfileSummaryInfo

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28584

llvm-svn: 291878
2017-01-13 01:34:00 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 3bab7e1a79 [PM] Separate the LoopAnalysisManager from the LoopPassManager and move
the latter to the Transforms library.

While the loop PM uses an analysis to form the IR units, the current
plan is to have the PM itself establish and enforce both loop simplified
form and LCSSA. This would be a layering violation in the analysis
library.

Fundamentally, the idea behind the loop PM is to *transform* loops in
addition to running passes over them, so it really seemed like the most
natural place to sink this was into the transforms library.

We can't just move *everything* because we also have loop analyses that
rely on a subset of the invariants. So this patch splits the the loop
infrastructure into the analysis management that has to be part of the
analysis library, and the transform-aware pass manager.

This also required splitting the loop analyses' printer passes out to
the transforms library, which makes sense to me as running these will
transform the code into LCSSA in theory.

I haven't split the unittest though because testing one component
without the other seems nearly intractable.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28452

llvm-svn: 291662
2017-01-11 09:43:56 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 3410eb21b6 [PM] Take more drastic measures to work around MSVC's failure on this
code. If this doesn't work and I can't find someone to help who has MSVC
installed, I'll back everything out I guess. =[

llvm-svn: 291661
2017-01-11 09:20:24 +00:00
Chandler Carruth babd4476b2 [PM] Pull a lambda out of an argument into a named variable to try and
get a little more clarity about the nature of the issue MSVC is having
with this code.

llvm-svn: 291656
2017-01-11 08:23:29 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 80813b157e [PM] Another attempt to satisfy MSVC.
llvm-svn: 291655
2017-01-11 07:53:12 +00:00
Chandler Carruth d3435487bf [PM] Try to appease MSVC by explicitly disambiguating a member name as
a template.

llvm-svn: 291654
2017-01-11 07:37:50 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 410eaeb064 [PM] Rewrite the loop pass manager to use a worklist and augmented run
arguments much like the CGSCC pass manager.

This is a major redesign following the pattern establish for the CGSCC layer to
support updates to the set of loops during the traversal of the loop nest and
to support invalidation of analyses.

An additional significant burden in the loop PM is that so many passes require
access to a large number of function analyses. Manually ensuring these are
cached, available, and preserved has been a long-standing burden in LLVM even
with the help of the automatic scheduling in the old pass manager. And it made
the new pass manager extremely unweildy. With this design, we can package the
common analyses up while in a function pass and make them immediately available
to all the loop passes. While in some cases this is unnecessary, I think the
simplicity afforded is worth it.

This does not (yet) address loop simplified form or LCSSA form, but those are
the next things on my radar and I have a clear plan for them.

While the patch is very large, most of it is either mechanically updating loop
passes to the new API or the new testing for the loop PM. The code for it is
reasonably compact.

I have not yet updated all of the loop passes to correctly leverage the update
mechanisms demonstrated in the unittests. I'll do that in follow-up patches
along with improved FileCheck tests for those passes that ensure things work in
more realistic scenarios. In many cases, there isn't much we can do with these
until the loop simplified form and LCSSA form are in place.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28292

llvm-svn: 291651
2017-01-11 06:23:21 +00:00
Sanjoy Das 3bb2dbd665 Fix an issue with isGuaranteedToTransferExecutionToSuccessor
I'm not sure if this was intentional, but today
isGuaranteedToTransferExecutionToSuccessor returns true for readonly and
argmemonly calls that may throw.  This commit changes the function to
not implicitly infer nounwind this way.

Even if we eventually specify readonly calls as not throwing,
isGuaranteedToTransferExecutionToSuccessor is not the best place to
infer that.  We should instead teach FunctionAttrs or some other such
pass to tag readonly functions / calls as nounwind instead.

llvm-svn: 290794
2016-12-31 22:12:34 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 443e57e01d [PM] Teach the CGSCC's CG update utility to more carefully invalidate
analyses when we're about to break apart an SCC.

We can't wait until after breaking apart the SCC to invalidate things:
1) Which SCC do we then invalidate? All of them?
2) Even if we invalidate all of them, a newly created SCC may not have
   a proxy that will convey the invalidation to functions!

Previously we only invalidated one of the SCCs and too late. This led to
stale analyses remaining in the cache. And because the caching strategy
actually works, they would get used and chaos would ensue.

Doing invalidation early is somewhat pessimizing though if we *know*
that the SCC structure won't change. So it turns out that the design to
make the mutation API force the caller to know the *kind* of mutation in
advance was indeed 100% correct and we didn't do enough of it. So this
change also splits two cases of switching a call edge to a ref edge into
two separate APIs so that callers can clearly test for this and take the
easy path without invalidating when appropriate. This is particularly
important in this case as we expect most inlines to be between functions
in separate SCCs and so the common case is that we don't have to so
aggressively invalidate analyses.

The LCG API change in turn needed some basic cleanups and better testing
in its unittest. No interesting functionality changed there other than
more coverage of the returned sequence of SCCs.

While this seems like an obvious improvement over the current state, I'd
like to revisit the core concept of invalidating within the CG-update
layer at all. I'm wondering if we would be better served forcing the
callers to handle the invalidation beforehand in the cases that they
can handle it. An interesting example is when we want to teach the
inliner to *update and preserve* analyses. But we can cross that bridge
when we get there.

With this patch, the new pass manager an build all of the LLVM test
suite at -O3 and everything passes. =D I haven't bootstrapped yet and
I'm sure there are still plenty of bugs, but this gives a nice baseline
so I'm going to increasingly focus on fleshing out the missing
functionality, especially the bits that are just turned off right now in
order to let us establish this baseline.

llvm-svn: 290664
2016-12-28 10:34:50 +00:00
Chandler Carruth c6334579e9 [LCG] Teach the ref edge removal to handle a ref edge that is trivial
due to a call cycle.

This actually crashed the ref removal before.

I've added a unittest that covers this kind of interesting graph
structure and mutation.

llvm-svn: 290645
2016-12-28 02:24:58 +00:00