First create a list of candidates, then transform. This simplifies the code in
that you have don't have to worry that you may be using an invalidated
iterator.
Previously, each time we created a memset/memcpy we would reevaluate the entire
loop potentially resulting in lots of redundant work for large basic blocks.
llvm-svn: 252817
This is fix for PR24059.
When we are hoisting instruction above some condition it may turn out
that metadata on this instruction was control dependant on the condition.
This metadata becomes invalid and we need to drop it.
This patch should cover most obvious places of speculative execution (which
I have found by greping isSafeToSpeculativelyExecute). I think there are more
cases but at least this change covers the severe ones.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14398
llvm-svn: 252604
Summary:
LAA currently generates a set of SCEV predicates that must be checked by users.
In the case of Loop Distribute/Loop Load Elimination, no such predicates could have
been emitted, since we don't allow stride versioning. However, in the future there
could be SCEV predicates that will need to be checked.
This change adds support for SCEV predicate versioning in the Loop Distribute, Loop
Load Eliminate and the loop versioning infrastructure.
Reviewers: anemet
Subscribers: mssimpso, sanjoy, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14240
llvm-svn: 252467
Some implicit ilist iterator conversions have crept back into Analysis,
Transforms, Hexagon, and llvm-stress. This removes them.
I'll commit a patch immediately after this to disallow them (in a
separate patch so that it's easy to revert if necessary).
llvm-svn: 252371
This marker prevents optimization passes from adding 'tail' or
'musttail' markers to a call. Is is used to prevent tail call
optimization from being performed on the call.
rdar://problem/22667622
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12923
llvm-svn: 252368
Summary:
This change makes the `isImpliedCondition` interface similar to the rest
of the functions in ValueTracking (in that it takes a DataLayout,
AssumptionCache etc.). This is an NFC, intended to make a later diff
less noisy.
Depends on D14369
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14391
llvm-svn: 252333
In my previous change to CVP (251606), I made CVP much more aggressive about trying to constant fold comparisons. This patch is a reversal in direction. Rather than being agressive about every compare, we restore the non-block local restriction for most, and then try hard for compares feeding returns.
The motivation for this is two fold:
* The more I thought about it, the less comfortable I got with the possible compile time impact of the other approach. There have been no reported issues, but after talking to a couple of folks, I've come to the conclusion the time probably isn't justified.
* It turns out we need to know the context to leverage the full power of LVI. In particular, asking about something at the end of it's block (the use of a compare in a return) will frequently get more precise results than something in the middle of a block. This is an implementation detail, but it's also hard to get around since mid-block queries have to reason about possible throwing instructions and don't get to use most of LVI's block focused infrastructure. This will become particular important when combined with http://reviews.llvm.org/D14263.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14271
llvm-svn: 252032
Summary:
The goal of this pass is to perform store-to-load forwarding across the
backedge of a loop. E.g.:
for (i)
A[i + 1] = A[i] + B[i]
=>
T = A[0]
for (i)
T = T + B[i]
A[i + 1] = T
The pass relies on loop dependence analysis via LoopAccessAnalisys to
find opportunities of loop-carried dependences with a distance of one
between a store and a load. Since it's using LoopAccessAnalysis, it was
easy to also add support for versioning away may-aliasing intervening
stores that would otherwise prevent this transformation.
This optimization is also performed by Load-PRE in GVN without the
option of multi-versioning. As was discussed with Daniel Berlin in
http://reviews.llvm.org/D9548, this is inferior to a more loop-aware
solution applied here. Hopefully, we will be able to remove some
complexity from GVN/MemorySSA as a consequence.
In the long run, we may want to extend this pass (or create a new one if
there is little overlap) to also eliminate loop-indepedent redundant
loads and store that *require* versioning due to may-aliasing
intervening stores/loads. I have some motivating cases for store
elimination. My plan right now is to wait for MemorySSA to come online
first rather than using memdep for this.
The main motiviation for this pass is the 456.hmmer loop in SPECint2006
where after distributing the original loop and vectorizing the top part,
we are left with the critical path exposed in the bottom loop. Being
able to promote the memory dependence into a register depedence (even
though the HW does perform store-to-load fowarding as well) results in a
major gain (~20%). This gain also transfers over to x86: it's
around 8-10%.
Right now the pass is off by default and can be enabled
with -enable-loop-load-elim. On the LNT testsuite, there are two
performance changes (negative number -> improvement):
1. -28% in Polybench/linear-algebra/solvers/dynprog: the length of the
critical paths is reduced
2. +2% in Polybench/stencils/adi: Unfortunately, I couldn't reproduce this
outside of LNT
The pass is scheduled after the loop vectorizer (which is after loop
distribution). The rational is to try to reuse LAA state, rather than
recomputing it. The order between LV and LLE is not critical because
normally LV does not touch scalar st->ld forwarding cases where
vectorizing would inhibit the CPU's st->ld forwarding to kick in.
LoopLoadElimination requires LAA to provide the full set of dependences
(including forward dependences). LAA is known to omit loop-independent
dependences in certain situations. The big comment before
removeDependencesFromMultipleStores explains why this should not occur
for the cases that we're interested in.
Reviewers: dberlin, hfinkel
Subscribers: junbuml, dberlin, mssimpso, rengolin, sanjoy, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13259
llvm-svn: 252017
Summary:
We now collect all types of dependences including lexically forward
deps not just "interesting" ones.
Reviewers: hfinkel
Subscribers: rengolin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13256
llvm-svn: 251985
Commit 251839 triggers miscompiles on some bots:
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/perf-x86_64-penryn-O3-polly-fast/builds/13723
(The commit is listed in 13722, but due to an existing failure introduced in
13721 and reverted in 13723 the failure is only visible in 13723)
To verify r251839 is indeed the only change that triggered the buildbot failures
and to ensure the buildbots remain green while investigating I temporarily
revert this commit. At the current state it is unclear if this commit introduced
some miscompile or if it only exposed code to Polly that is subsequently
miscompiled by Polly.
llvm-svn: 251901
Summary:
This patch adds support to check if a loop has loop invariant conditions which lead to loop exits. If so, we know that if the exit path is taken, it is at the first loop iteration. If there is an induction variable used in that exit path whose value has not been updated, it will keep its initial value passing from loop preheader. We can therefore rewrite the exit value with
its initial value. This will help remove phis created by LCSSA and enable other optimizations like loop unswitch.
Reviewers: sanjoy
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13974
llvm-svn: 251839
Somewhat shockingly for an analysis pass which is computing constant ranges, LVI did not understand the ranges provided by range metadata.
As part of this change, I included a change to CVP primarily because doing so made it much easier to write small self contained test cases. CVP was previously only handling the non-local operand case, but given that LVI can sometimes figure out information about instructions standalone, I don't see any reason to restrict this. There could possibly be a compile time impact from this, but I suspect it should be minimal. If anyone has an example which substaintially regresses, please let me know. I could restrict the block local handling to ICmps feeding Terminator instructions if needed.
Note that this patch continues a somewhat bad practice in LVI. In many cases, we know facts about values, and separate context sensitive facts about values. LVI makes no effort to distinguish and will frequently cache the same value fact repeatedly for different contexts. I would like to change this, but that's a large enough change that I want it to go in separately with clear documentation of what's changing. Other examples of this include the non-null handling, and arguments.
As a meta comment: the entire motivation of this change was being able to write smaller (aka reasonable sized) test cases for a future patch teaching LVI about select instructions.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13543
llvm-svn: 251606
Summary:
If P branches to Q conditional on C and Q branches to R conditional on
C' and C => C' then the branch conditional on C' can be folded to an
unconditional branch.
Reviewers: reames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13972
llvm-svn: 251557
Summary:
This patch adds support to check if a loop has loop invariant conditions which lead to loop exits. If so, we know that if the exit path is taken, it is at the first loop iteration. If there is an induction variable used in that exit path whose value has not been updated, it will keep its initial value passing from loop preheader. We can therefore rewrite the exit value with
its initial value. This will help remove phis created by LCSSA and enable other optimizations like loop unswitch.
Reviewers: sanjoy
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13974
llvm-svn: 251492
We should remove noalias along with dereference and dereference_or_null attributes
because statepoint could potentially touch the entire heap including noalias objects.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14032
llvm-svn: 251333
After some look-ahead PRE was added for GEPs, an instruction could end
up in the table of candidates before it was actually inspected. When
this happened the pass might decide it was the best candidate to
replace itself. This didn't go well.
Should fix PR25291
llvm-svn: 251145
The insertLoop() API is only used to add new loops, and has confusing
ownership semantics. Simplify it by replacing it with addLoop().
llvm-svn: 251064
As an invariant, BasicBlocks cannot be empty when passed to a transform.
This is not the case for MachineBasicBlocks and the Sink pass was ported
from the MachineSink pass which would explain the check's existence.
llvm-svn: 251057
`normalizeForInvokeSafepoint` in RewriteStatepointsForGC.cpp, as it is
written today, deals with `gc.relocate` and `gc.result` uses of a
statepoint equally well. This change documents this fact and adds a
test case.
There is no functional change here -- only documentation of existing
functionality.
llvm-svn: 250784
The `"statepoint-id"` and `"statepoint-num-patch-bytes"` attributes are
used solely to determine properties of the `gc.statepoint` being
created. Once the `gc.statepoint` is in place, these should be removed.
llvm-svn: 250491
Summary:
This is a step towards using operand bundles to carry deopt state till
RewriteStatepointsForGC. The change adds a flag to
RewriteStatepointsForGC that teaches it to pick up deopt state from a
`"deopt"` operand bundle attached to the `call` or `invoke` it is
wrapping.
The command line flag added, `-rs4gc-use-deopt-bundles`, will only exist
for a short while. Once we are able to pipe deopt bundle state through
the full optimization pipeline without problems, we will "constant fold"
`-rs4gc-use-deopt-bundles` to `true`.
Reviewers: swaroop.sridhar, reames
Subscribers: llvm-commits, sanjoy
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13372
llvm-svn: 250489
Summary:
`cloneArithmeticIVUser` currently trips over expression like `add %iv,
-1` when `%iv` is being zero extended -- it tries to construct the
widened use as `add %iv.zext, zext(-1)` and (correctly) fails to prove
equivalence to `zext(add %iv, -1)` (here the SCEV for `%iv` is
`{1,+,1}`).
This change teaches `IndVars` to try sign extending the non-IV operand
if that makes the newly constructed IV use equivalent to the widened
narrow IV use.
Reviewers: atrick, hfinkel, reames
Subscribers: sanjoy, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13717
llvm-svn: 250483
Summary:
This NFC splitting is intended to make a later diff easier to follow.
It just tail duplicates `cloneIVUser` into `cloneArithmeticIVUser` and
`cloneBitwiseIVUser`.
Reviewers: atrick, hfinkel, reames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13716
llvm-svn: 250481
With r250345 and r250343, we start to observe the following failure
when bootstrap clang with lto and pgo:
PHI node entries do not match predecessors!
%.sroa.029.3.i = phi %"class.llvm::SDNode.13298"* [ null, %30953 ], [ null, %31017 ], [ null, %30998 ], [ null, %_ZN4llvm8dyn_castINS_14ConstantSDNodeENS_7SDValueEEENS_10cast_rettyIT_T0_E8ret_typeERS5_.exit.i.1804 ], [ null, %30975 ], [ null, %30991 ], [ null, %_ZNK4llvm3EVT13getScalarTypeEv.exit.i.1812 ], [ %..sroa.029.0.i, %_ZN4llvm11SmallVectorIiLj8EED1Ev.exit.i.1826 ], !dbg !451895
label %30998
label %_ZNK4llvm3EVTeqES0_.exit19.thread.i
LLVM ERROR: Broken function found, compilation aborted!
I will re-commit this if the bot does not recover.
llvm-svn: 250366