The new Dependences struct in the DependenceInfo holds all information
that was formerly part of the DependenceInfo. It also provides the
same interface for the user to access this information.
This is another step to a more general ScopPass interface that does
allow multiple SCoPs to be "in flight".
llvm-svn: 231327
We rename the Dependences pass to DependenceInfo as a first step to a
caching pass policy. The new DependenceInfo pass will later provide
"Dependences" for a SCoP.
To keep consistency the test folder is renamed too.
llvm-svn: 231308
If a scalar was defined and used only in a non-affine subregion we do
not need to model the accesses. However, if the scalar was defined
inside the region and escapes the region we have to model the access.
The same is true if the scalar was defined outside and used inside the
region.
llvm-svn: 230960
With the patches r230325, r230329 and r230340 we can handle non-affine
control flow in (loop-free) subregions. As all LLVM test-suite tests pass and
we get ~20% more non-trivial SCoPs, we activate it now by default.
llvm-svn: 230624
This allows us to model non-affine regions in the SCoP representation.
SCoP statements can now describe either basic blocks or non-affine
regions. In the latter case all accesses in the region are accumulated
for the statement and write accesses, except in the entry, have to be
marked as may-write.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7846
llvm-svn: 230329
With this patch we allow the SCoP detection to detect regions as SCoPs
which have non-affine control flow inside. All non-affine regions are
tracked and later accessible to the ScopInfo.
As there is no real difference, non-affine branches as well as
floating point branches are covered (and both called non-affine
control flow). However, the detection is restricted to
overapproximate only loop free regions.
llvm-svn: 230325
Scops that only read seem generally uninteresting and scops that only write are
most likely initializations where there is also little to optimize. To not
waste compile time we bail early.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7735
llvm-svn: 229820
Alias checks might become costly if there are divisions that complicate the
description of the accessed locations. By overaproximating them we get fairly
accurate results without the huge compile time cost.
llvm-svn: 229252
This allows us to skip ast and code generation if we did not optimize
a SCoP and will not generate parallel or alias annotations. The
initial heuristic to exit is simple but allows improvements later on.
All failing test cases have been modified to disable early exit, thus
to keep their coverage.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7254
llvm-svn: 228851
These write are important as they will force the scheduling and code
generation of an otherwise trivial statement and also impose an order of
execution needed to guarantee the correct final value for a scalar in a loop.
Added test case modeled after ClamAV/clamscan.
llvm-svn: 228847
This change has two main purposes:
1) We do not use a static interface to hide an object we create and
destroy for every basic block we copy.
2) We allow the BlockGenerator to store information between calls to
the copyBB method. This will ease scalar/phi code generation
later on.
While a lot of method signatures were changed this should not cause
any real behaviour change.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7467
llvm-svn: 228443
This allows us to model PHI nodes in the polyhedral description
without demoting them. The modeling however will result in the
same accesses as the demotion would have introduced.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7415
llvm-svn: 228433
The support is currently limited as we only allow them in the input but do
not emit them in the transformed SCoP due to the possible semantic changes.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5225
llvm-svn: 227054
The max loop depth was incorrectly computed for scops that contain a
block from a loop but do not contain the entire loop. We need to
check that the full loop is contained in the region when computing
the max loop depth.
These scops occur when a region containing an inner loop is expanded
to include some blocks from the outer loop, but it cannot be fully
expanded to contain the outer loop because the region containing the
outer loop is invalid.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6913
llvm-svn: 225812
This support is still incomplete and consequently hidden behind a switch that
needs to be enabled. One problem is ATM that we incorrectly interpret very large
unsigned values as negative values even if used in an unsigned comparision.
llvm-svn: 225480
AF = dyn_cast<SCEVAddRecExpr>(Pair.second) may be NULL for some SCEVs that we do
not support. When reporting the error we still want to pass a pointer that is
known to always be non-NULL.
I do not yet have a test case for this, unfortunately.
llvm-svn: 225461
Schedule dimensions that have the same constant value accross all statements do
not carry any information, but due to the increased dimensionality of the
schedule cost compile time. To not pay this cost, we remove constant dimensions
if possible.
llvm-svn: 225067
Without updating dependences we may lose implicit transitive dependences for
which all explicit dependences have gone through the statement iterations we
have just eliminated.
No test case. We should probably implement a -verify-dependences option.
This fixes llvm.org/PR21227
llvm-svn: 224459
This simplifies the construction of the input for the reduction dependence
computation and at the same time removes an assumption that expects the schedule
to be of 2D + 1 form (the odd dimensions giving textual order, the even
dimensions the loop iterations).
llvm-svn: 223621
This commit drops the Cloog support for Polly. The scripts and
documentation are changed to only use isl as prerequisity. In the code
all Cloog specific parts have been removed and all relevant tests have
been ported to the isl backend when it was created.
llvm-svn: 223141
SCEV based code generation has been the default for two weeks after having
been tested for a long time. We now drop the support the non-scev-based code
generation.
llvm-svn: 222978
In TempScopInfo::buildCondition we extract the conditions to guard the
BB *in addition of* loop bounds. This means we should only consider the
conditions in the paths (in CFG) that do not contain cycles (loops).
At the same time, we set the invert flag if the FalseBB of the current
branch dominates our target BB to indicate that we reach the target BB
with an inverted condition from the current branch.
In this case, the path from the FalseBB contains a cycle if the FalseBB
is the target of a backedge. The conditions implied by such a path should
not be consider. We can identify such a case by checking if the TrueBB
also dominates our target BB, which means we can also reach our target
BB from the TrueBB, without going through the backedge.
llvm-svn: 222907
In case a GEP instruction references into a fixed size array e.g., an access
A[i][j] into an array A[100x100], LLVM-IR does not guarantee that the subscripts
always compute values that are within array bounds. We now derive the set of
parameter values for which all accesses are within bounds and add the assumption
that the scop is only every executed with this set of parameter values.
Example:
void foo(float A[][20], long n, long m {
for (long i = 0; i < n; i++)
for (long j = 0; j < m; j++)
A[i][j] = ...
This loop yields out-of-bound accesses if m is at least 20 and at the same time
at least one iteration of the outer loop is executed. Hence, we assume:
n <= 0 or m <= 20.
Doing so simplifies the dependence analysis problem, allows us to perform
more optimizations and generate better code.
TODO: The location where the GEP instruction is executed is not necessarily the
location where the memory is actually accessed. As a result scanning for GEP[s]
is imprecise. Even though this is not a correctness problem, this imprecision
may result in missed optimizations or non-optimal run-time checks.
In polybench where this mismatch between parametric loop bounds and fixed size
arrays is common, we see with this patch significant reductions in compile time
(up to 50%) and execution time (up to 70%). We see two significant compile time
regressions (fdtd-2d, jacobi-2d-imper), and one execution time regression
(trmm). Both regressions arise due to additional optimizations that have been
enabled by this patch. They can be addressed in subsequent commits.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D6369
llvm-svn: 222754
We will use ScalarEvolution in the ScopInfo.cpp to get the loop trip
count, not cache it in the TempScop object.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6070
llvm-svn: 221035
Now MaxLoopDepth only lives in Scops not in TempScops anymore.
This is the first part of a series of changes to make TempScops
obsolete.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6069
llvm-svn: 221026
By adding braces into the DEBUG statement we can make clang-format format code
such as:
DEBUG(stmt1(); stmt2())
as multi-line code:
DEBUG({
stmt1();
stmt2();
});
This makes control-flow in debug statements easier to read.
llvm-svn: 220441
This patch changes the RegionSet type used in ScopDetection from a
std::set to a llvm::SetVector. The reason for the change is to
ensure deterministic output when printing the result of the
analysis. We had a windows buildbot failure for the modified test
because the output was coming in a different order.
Only one test case needed to be modified for this change. We could
use CHECK-DAG directives instead of CHECK in the analysis test cases
because the actual order of scops does not matter, but I think that
change should be done in a separate patch that modifies all the
appliciable tests. I simply modified the test to reflect the
expected deterministic output.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5897
llvm-svn: 220423
This patch does not change the semantic on it's own. However, the
dependence analysis as well as dce will now use the newest available
access relation for each memory access, thus if at some point the json
importer or any other pass will run before those two and set a new
access relation the behaviour will be different. In general it is
unclear if the dependence analysis and dce should be run on the old or
new access functions anyway. If we need to access the original access
function from the outside later, we can expose the getter again.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5707
llvm-svn: 219612
In case the pieceweise affine function used to create an isl_ast_expr
had empty cases (e.g., with contradicting constraints on the
parameters), it was possible that the condition of the isl_ast_expr
select was not a comparison but a constant (thus of type i64).
This patch does two thing:
1) Handle the case the condition of a select is not a i1 type like C.
2) Try to simplify the pieceweise affine functions for the min/max
access when we generate runtime alias checks. That step can often
remove empty or redundant cases as well as redundant constrains.
This fixes bug: http://llvm.org/PR21167
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5627
llvm-svn: 219208
This resolved the issues with delinearized accesses that might alias,
thus delinearization doesn't deactivate runtime alias checks anymore.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5614
llvm-svn: 219078
This class allows to store information about the arrays in the SCoP.
For each base pointer in the SCoP one object is created storing the
type and dimension sizes of the array. The objects can be obtained via
the SCoP, a MemoryAccess or the isl_id associated with the output
dimension of a MemoryAccess (the description of what is accessed).
So far we use the information in the IslExprBuilder to create the
right base type before indexing into the base array. This fixes the
bug http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=21113 (both test cases are
included). On top of that we can now build runtime alias checks for
delinearized arrays as the dimension sizes are also part of the
ScopArrayInfo objects.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5613
llvm-svn: 219077
We use a parametric abstraction of the domain to split alias groups
if accesses cannot be executed under the same parameter evaluation.
The two test cases check that we can remove alias groups if the
pointers which might alias are never accessed under the same parameter
evaluation and that the minimal/maximal accesses are not global but
with regards to the parameter evaluation.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5436
llvm-svn: 218758
If there are multiple read only base addresses in an alias group
we can split it into multiple alias groups each with only one
read only access. This way we might reduce the number of
comparisons significantly as it grows linear in the number of
alias groups but exponential in their size.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5435
llvm-svn: 218757
This is just a optimization to save the compile time and execution time
for runtime alias checks if the user guarantees no aliasing all together.
llvm-svn: 218613
If too many parameters are involved in accesses used to create RTCs
we might end up with enormous compile times and RTC expressions.
The reason is that the lexmin/lexmax is dependent on all these
parameters and isl might need to create a case for every "ordering"
of them (e.g., p0 <= p1 <= p2, p1 <= p0 <= p2, ...).
The exact number of parameters allowed in accesses is defined by the
command line option -polly-rtc-max-parameters=XXX and set by default
to 8.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5500
llvm-svn: 218566
The run-time alias check places code that involves the base pointer at the
beginning of the SCoP. This breaks if the base pointer is defined inside the
SCoP. Hence, we can only create a run-time alias check if we are sure the base
pointer is not an instruction defined inside the scop. If it is we refuse to
handle the SCoP.
This commit should unbreak most of our current LNT failures.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5483
llvm-svn: 218412
This commit drops a call to std::sort, which sorted the base pointers that
possibly alias according to the address at which their corresponding llvm::Value
was allocated. There does not seem to be any good reason, why those pointers
should be (re)sorted and this only makes the output indeterministic.
llvm-svn: 218052
This change will build all alias groups (minimal/maximal accesses
to possible aliasing base pointers) we have to check before
we can assume an alias free environment. It will also use these
to create Runtime Alias Checks (RTC) in the ISL code generation
backend, thus allow us to optimize SCoPs despite possibly aliasing
pointers when this backend is used.
This feature will be enabled for the isl code generator, e.g.,
--polly-code-generator=isl, but disabled for:
- The cloog code generator (still the default).
- The case delinearization is enabled.
- The case non-affine accesses are allowed.
llvm-svn: 218046
During the IslAst parallelism check also compute the minimal dependency
distance and store it in the IstAst for node.
Reviewer: sebpop
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4987
llvm-svn: 217729
Even though we previously correctly detected the multi-dimensional access
pattern for accesses with a certain base address, we only delinearized
non-affine accesses to this address. Affine accesses have not been touched and
remained as single dimensional accesses. The result was an inconsistent
description of accesses to the same array, with some being one dimensional and
some being multi-dimensional.
This patch ensures that all accesses are delinearized with the same
dimensionality as soon as a single one of them has been detected as non-affine.
While writing this patch, it became evident that the options
-polly-allow-nonaffine and -polly-detect-keep-going have not been properly
supported in case delinearization has been turned on. This patch adds relevant
test coverage and addresses these issues as well. We also added some more
documentation to the functions that are modified in this patch.
This fixes llvm.org/PR20123
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5329
llvm-svn: 217728
At the moment we assume that only elements of identical size are stored/loaded
to a certain base pointer. This patch adds logic to the scop detection to verify
this.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5329
llvm-svn: 217727
It seems we added guards to check for non-existing std::map elements to make
sure they are default constructed before first accessed. Besides, the code
being wrong because of checking Context.NonAffineAccesses[BasePointer].size()
instead of Context.cound(BasePointer), such a check is also not necessary
as std::map takes care of this already.
From the std::map documentation:
"If k does not match the key of any element in the container, the function
inserts a new element with that key and returns a reference to its mapped value.
Notice that this always increases the container size by one, even if no mapped
value is assigned to the element (the element is constructed using its default
constructor)."
llvm-svn: 217506
Arcanist (arc) will now always run linters before uploading any new
commit to Phabricator. All errors/warnings (or their absence) will be
shown in the web interface together with a explanation by the commiter
(arcanist will ask the commiter if the build was not clean).
The linters include:
- clang-format
- spelling check
- permissions check (aka. chmod)
- filename check
- merge conflict marker check
Note, that their scope is sometimes limited (see .arclint for
details).
This commit also fixes all errors and warnings these linters reported,
namely:
- spelling mistakes and typos
- executable permissions for various text files
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4916
llvm-svn: 215871
This will spill out information about LLVM-internals. However, in cases
where the name of the Value matches the name of the array in the source,
we provide more useful information. In cases where we spill internals,
the information still might help the user to pin down the correct
arrays.
The problem we face here is: The error is pinned to the debug location
of one of the offending values out of the alias set instead of all of them.
The more information we give the user about the set of aliasing
pointers the better.
llvm-svn: 215830
This reverts commit 215684. The intention of the commit is great, but
unfortunately it seems to be the cause of 14 LNT test suite failures:
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/perf-x86_64-penryn-O3-polly/builds/116
To make our buildbots and performance testers green until this issue is solved,
we temporarily revert this commit.
llvm-svn: 215816
The support is limited to signed modulo access and condition
expressions with a constant right hand side, e.g., A[i % 2] or
A[i % 9]. Test cases are modified according to this new feature and
new test cases are added.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4843
llvm-svn: 215684
Store the llvm::Value pointers of the AliasSet instead of the AliasSet
itself.
We have to be careful about changed IR when the message is generated,
because the Value pointers might not exist anymore. This would render
the Diagnostic invalid. For now we just assert there.
Simply do not retreive a diagnostic message after the IR has changed
it's not valid information anyway.
llvm-svn: 215625
There is no needed for neither 1-dimensional nor higher dimensional arrays to
require positive offsets in the outermost array dimension.
We originally introduced this assumption with the support for delinearizing
multi-dimensional arrays.
llvm-svn: 214665
+ Split all reduction dependences and map them to the causing memory accesses.
+ Print the types & base addresses of broken reductions for each "reduction
parallel" marked loop (OpenMP style).
+ 3 test cases to show how reductions are now represented in the isl ast.
The mapping "(ast) loops -> broken reductions" is also needed to find the
memory accesses we need to privatize in a loop.
llvm-svn: 214489