Commit Graph

392 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Chandler Carruth 2946cd7010 Update the file headers across all of the LLVM projects in the monorepo
to reflect the new license.

We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.

Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.

llvm-svn: 351636
2019-01-19 08:50:56 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 363ac68374 [CallSite removal] Migrate all Alias Analysis APIs to use the newly
minted `CallBase` class instead of the `CallSite` wrapper.

This moves the largest interwoven collection of APIs that traffic in
`CallSite`s. While a handful of these could have been migrated with
a minorly more shallow migration by converting from a `CallSite` to
a `CallBase`, it hardly seemed worth it. Most of the APIs needed to
migrate together because of the complex interplay of AA APIs and the
fact that converting from a `CallBase` to a `CallSite` isn't free in its
current implementation.

Out of tree users of these APIs can fairly reliably migrate with some
combination of `.getInstruction()` on the `CallSite` instance and
casting the resulting pointer. The most generic form will look like `CS`
-> `cast_or_null<CallBase>(CS.getInstruction())` but in most cases there
is a more elegant migration. Hopefully, this migrates enough APIs for
users to fully move from `CallSite` to the base class. All of the
in-tree users were easily migrated in that fashion.

Thanks for the review from Saleem!

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55641

llvm-svn: 350503
2019-01-07 05:42:51 +00:00
David L. Jones 54c01ad6a9 Revert r348645 - "[MemCpyOpt] memset->memcpy forwarding with undef tail"
This revision caused trucated memsets for structs with padding. See:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20181210/610520.html

llvm-svn: 349002
2018-12-13 03:15:11 +00:00
Nikita Popov 94b8e2ea4e [MemCpyOpt] memset->memcpy forwarding with undef tail
Currently memcpyopt optimizes cases like

    memset(a, byte, N);
    memcpy(b, a, M);

to

    memset(a, byte, N);
    memset(b, byte, M);

if M <= N. Often this allows further simplifications down the line,
which drop the first memset entirely.

This patch extends this optimization for the case where M > N, but we
know that the bytes a[N..M] are undef due to alloca/lifetime.start.

This situation arises relatively often for Rust code, because Rust does
not initialize trailing structure padding and loves to insert redundant
memcpys. This also fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39844.

For the implementation, I'm reusing a bit of code for a similar existing
optimization (direct memcpy of undef). I've also added memset support to
MemDepAnalysis GetLocation -- Instead, getPointerDependencyFrom could be
used, but it seems to make more sense to add this to GetLocation and thus
make the computation cachable.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55120

llvm-svn: 348645
2018-12-07 21:16:58 +00:00
George Burgess IV 40dc63e1f0 [Analysis] Make LocationSizes carry an 'imprecise' bit
There are places where we need to merge multiple LocationSizes of
different sizes into one, and get a sensible result.

There are other places where we want to optimize aggressively based on
the value of a LocationSizes (e.g. how can a store of four bytes be to
an area of storage that's only two bytes large?)

This patch makes LocationSize hold an 'imprecise' bit to note whether
the LocationSize can be treated as an upper-bound and lower-bound for
the size of a location, or just an upper-bound.

This concludes the series of patches leading up to this. The most recent
of which is r344108.

Fixes PR36228.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44748

llvm-svn: 344114
2018-10-10 06:39:40 +00:00
Fangrui Song 0cac726a00 llvm::sort(C.begin(), C.end(), ...) -> llvm::sort(C, ...)
Summary: The convenience wrapper in STLExtras is available since rL342102.

Reviewers: dblaikie, javed.absar, JDevlieghere, andreadb

Subscribers: MatzeB, sanjoy, arsenm, dschuff, mehdi_amini, sdardis, nemanjai, jvesely, nhaehnle, sbc100, jgravelle-google, eraman, aheejin, kbarton, JDevlieghere, javed.absar, gbedwell, jrtc27, mgrang, atanasyan, steven_wu, george.burgess.iv, dexonsmith, kristina, jsji, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52573

llvm-svn: 343163
2018-09-27 02:13:45 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 9ae926b973 [IR] Replace `isa<TerminatorInst>` with `isTerminator()`.
This is a bit awkward in a handful of places where we didn't even have
an instruction and now we have to see if we can build one. But on the
whole, this seems like a win and at worst a reasonable cost for removing
`TerminatorInst`.

All of this is part of the removal of `TerminatorInst` from the
`Instruction` type hierarchy.

llvm-svn: 340701
2018-08-26 09:51:22 +00:00
John Brawn cd5f37f3f1 [MemDep] Use PhiValuesAnalysis to improve alias analysis results
This is being done in order to make GVN able to better optimize certain inputs.
MemDep doesn't use PhiValues directly, but does need to notifiy it when things
get invalidated.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48489

llvm-svn: 338384
2018-07-31 14:19:29 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski ce358262eb Dissallow non-empty metadata for invariant.group
Summary:
This feature is not needed, but it might be usefull in the future
to use metadata to mark what which function should support it
(and strip it when not).

Reviewers: rsmith, sanjoy, amharc, kuhar

Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45419

llvm-svn: 332787
2018-05-18 23:53:46 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski 153fe60079 [MemDep] Fixed handling of invariant.group
Summary:
Memdep had funny bug related to invariant.groups - because it did not
invalidated cache, in some very rare cases it was possible to show memory
dependence of the instruction that was deleted, but because other
instruction took it's place it resulted in call to vtable!
Thanks @amharc for repro!.

Reviewers: dberlin, kuhar, amharc

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45320

Co-authored-by: Krzysztof Pszeniczny <krzysztof.pszeniczny@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 332781
2018-05-18 22:40:34 +00:00
Nicola Zaghen d34e60ca85 Rename DEBUG macro to LLVM_DEBUG.
The DEBUG() macro is very generic so it might clash with other projects.
The renaming was done as follows:
- git grep -l 'DEBUG' | xargs sed -i 's/\bDEBUG\s\?(/LLVM_DEBUG(/g'
- git diff -U0 master | ../clang/tools/clang-format/clang-format-diff.py -i -p1 -style LLVM
- Manual change to APInt
- Manually chage DOCS as regex doesn't match it.

In the transition period the DEBUG() macro is still present and aliased
to the LLVM_DEBUG() one.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43624

llvm-svn: 332240
2018-05-14 12:53:11 +00:00
Mandeep Singh Grang 97bcade70f [Analysis] Change std::sort to llvm::sort in response to r327219
Summary:
r327219 added wrappers to std::sort which randomly shuffle the container before sorting.
This will help in uncovering non-determinism caused due to undefined sorting
order of objects having the same key.

To make use of that infrastructure we need to invoke llvm::sort instead of std::sort.

Note: This patch is one of a series of patches to replace *all* std::sort to llvm::sort.
Refer D44363 for a list of all the required patches.

Reviewers: sanjoy, dexonsmith, hfinkel, RKSimon

Reviewed By: dexonsmith

Subscribers: david2050, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44944

llvm-svn: 328925
2018-04-01 01:46:51 +00:00
Philip Reames f5ff5d584e [MDA] Use common code instead of reimplementing same. [NFC]
llvm-svn: 322747
2018-01-17 19:57:19 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 6d31001cd6 Revert "[memcpyopt] Teach memcpyopt to optimize across basic blocks"
This reverts r321138. It seems there are still underlying issues with
memdep. PR35519 seems to still be present if debug info is enabled. We
end up losing a memcpy. Somehow during store to memset merging, we
insert the memset after the memcpy or fail to update the memdep analysis
to account for the newly inserted memset of a pair.

Reduced test case:

  #include <assert.h>
  #include <stdio.h>
  #include <string>
  #include <utility>
  #include <vector>

  void do_push_back(
      std::vector<std::pair<std::string, std::vector<std::string>>>* crls) {
    crls->push_back(std::make_pair(std::string(), std::vector<std::string>()));
  }

  int __attribute__((optnone)) main() {
    // Put some data in the vector and then remove it so we take the push_back
    // fast path.
    std::vector<std::pair<std::string, std::vector<std::string>>> crl_set;
    crl_set.push_back({"asdf", {}});
    crl_set.pop_back();
    printf("first word in vector storage: %p\n", *(void**)crl_set.data());

    // Do the push_back which may fail to initialize the data.
    do_push_back(&crl_set);
    auto* first = &crl_set.back().first;
    printf("first word in vector storage (should be zero): %p\n",
           *(void**)crl_set.data());
    assert(first->empty());
    puts("ok");
  }

Compile with libc++, enable optimizations, and enable debug info:
$ clang++ -stdlib=libc++ -g -O2 t.cpp -o t.exe -Wl,-rpath=llvm/build/lib

This program will assert with this change.

llvm-svn: 321510
2017-12-28 05:10:33 +00:00
Alina Sbirlea 50db8a2086 [ModRefInfo] Add must alias info to ModRefInfo.
Summary:
Add an additional bit to ModRefInfo, ModRefInfo::Must, to be cleared for known must aliases.
Shift existing Mod/Ref/ModRef values to include an additional most
significant bit. Update wrappers that modify ModRefInfo values to
reflect the change.

Notes:
* ModRefInfo::Must is almost entirely cleared in the AAResults methods, the remaining changes are trying to preserve it.
* Only some small changes to make custom AA passes set ModRefInfo::Must (BasicAA).
* GlobalsModRef already declares a bit, who's meaning overlaps with the most significant bit in ModRefInfo (MayReadAnyGlobal). No changes to shift the value of MayReadAnyGlobal (see AlignedMap). FunctionInfo.getModRef() ajusts most significant bit so correctness is preserved, but the Must info is lost.
* There are cases where the ModRefInfo::Must is not set, e.g. 2 calls that only read will return ModRefInfo::NoModRef, though they may read from exactly the same location.

Reviewers: dberlin, hfinkel, george.burgess.iv

Subscribers: llvm-commits, sanjoy

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38862

llvm-svn: 321309
2017-12-21 21:41:53 +00:00
Dan Gohman aa3922819e [memcpyopt] Teach memcpyopt to optimize across basic blocks
This teaches memcpyopt to make a non-local memdep query when a local query
indicates that the dependency is non-local. This notably allows it to
eliminate many more llvm.memcpy calls in common Rust code, often by 20-30%.

This is r319482 and r319483, along with fixes for PR35519: fix the 
optimization that merges stores into memsets to preserve cached memdep
info, and fix memdep's non-local caching strategy to not assume that larger
queries are always more conservative than smaller ones.

Fixes PR28958 and PR35519.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40802

llvm-svn: 321138
2017-12-20 01:36:25 +00:00
Evgeniy Stepanov c667c1f47a Hardware-assisted AddressSanitizer (llvm part).
Summary:
This is LLVM instrumentation for the new HWASan tool. It is basically
a stripped down copy of ASan at this point, w/o stack or global
support. Instrumenation adds a global constructor + runtime callbacks
for every load and store.

HWASan comes with its own IR attribute.

A brief design document can be found in
clang/docs/HardwareAssistedAddressSanitizerDesign.rst (submitted earlier).

Reviewers: kcc, pcc, alekseyshl

Subscribers: srhines, mehdi_amini, mgorny, javed.absar, eraman, llvm-commits, hiraditya

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40932

llvm-svn: 320217
2017-12-09 00:21:41 +00:00
Alina Sbirlea 193429f0c8 [ModRefInfo] Make enum ModRefInfo an enum class [NFC].
Summary:
Make enum ModRefInfo an enum class. Changes to ModRefInfo values should
be done using inline wrappers.
This should prevent future bit-wise opearations from being added, which can be more error-prone.

Reviewers: sanjoy, dberlin, hfinkel, george.burgess.iv

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40933

llvm-svn: 320107
2017-12-07 22:41:34 +00:00
Alina Sbirlea d6037ebeeb [ModRefInfo] Replace remaining bit-wise operations with wrappers.
llvm-svn: 319993
2017-12-07 00:43:19 +00:00
Hans Wennborg 146a9c3e51 Revert r319482 and r319483 "[memcpyopt] Teach memcpyopt to optimize across basic blocks"
This caused PR35519.

> [memcpyopt] Teach memcpyopt to optimize across basic blocks
>
> This teaches memcpyopt to make a non-local memdep query when a local query
> indicates that the dependency is non-local. This notably allows it to
> eliminate many more llvm.memcpy calls in common Rust code, often by 20-30%.
>
> Fixes PR28958.
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38374
>

> [memcpyopt] Commit file missed in r319482.
>
> This change was meant to be included with r319482 but was accidentally
> omitted.

llvm-svn: 319873
2017-12-06 01:47:55 +00:00
Alina Sbirlea 63d2250a42 Modify ModRefInfo values using static inline method abstractions [NFC].
Summary:
The aim is to make ModRefInfo checks and changes more intuitive
and less error prone using inline methods that abstract the bit operations.

Ideally ModRefInfo would become an enum class, but that change will require
a wider set of changes into FunctionModRefBehavior.

Reviewers: sanjoy, george.burgess.iv, dberlin, hfinkel

Subscribers: nlopes, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40749

llvm-svn: 319821
2017-12-05 20:12:23 +00:00
Dan Gohman 59e4c0b938 [memcpyopt] Teach memcpyopt to optimize across basic blocks
This teaches memcpyopt to make a non-local memdep query when a local query
indicates that the dependency is non-local. This notably allows it to
eliminate many more llvm.memcpy calls in common Rust code, often by 20-30%.

Fixes PR28958.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38374

llvm-svn: 319482
2017-11-30 22:10:53 +00:00
Mikael Holmen 279790b674 [MemDep] DBG intrinsics don't impact abort limit for call site dependence analysis
Summary:
Memory dependence analysis no longer counts DbgInfoIntrinsics towards the
limit where to abort the analysis. Before, a bunch of calls to dbg.value
could affect the generated code, meaning that with -g we could generate
different code than without.

Reviewers: chandlerc, Prazek, davide, efriedma

Reviewed By: efriedma

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39181

llvm-svn: 316551
2017-10-25 06:15:32 +00:00
Eugene Zelenko bb1b2d09cf [Analysis] Fix some Clang-tidy modernize and Include What You Use warnings; other minor fixes (NFC).
llvm-svn: 311048
2017-08-16 22:07:40 +00:00
Davide Italiano f15fb368a3 [MemDep] Cleanup return after else & use `auto`. NFC.
llvm-svn: 306255
2017-06-25 22:12:59 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 6bda14b313 Sort the remaining #include lines in include/... and lib/....
I did this a long time ago with a janky python script, but now
clang-format has built-in support for this. I fed clang-format every
line with a #include and let it re-sort things according to the precise
LLVM rules for include ordering baked into clang-format these days.

I've reverted a number of files where the results of sorting includes
isn't healthy. Either places where we have legacy code relying on
particular include ordering (where possible, I'll fix these separately)
or where we have particular formatting around #include lines that
I didn't want to disturb in this patch.

This patch is *entirely* mechanical. If you get merge conflicts or
anything, just ignore the changes in this patch and run clang-format
over your #include lines in the files.

Sorry for any noise here, but it is important to keep these things
stable. I was seeing an increasing number of patches with irrelevant
re-ordering of #include lines because clang-format was used. This patch
at least isolates that churn, makes it easy to skip when resolving
conflicts, and gets us to a clean baseline (again).

llvm-svn: 304787
2017-06-06 11:49:48 +00:00
Galina Kistanova 0b69e363f6 Added LLVM_FALLTHROUGH to address warning: this statement may fall through. NFC.
llvm-svn: 304356
2017-05-31 22:02:05 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski 9530883e8c [Devirtualization] MemDep returns non-local !invariant.group dependencies
Summary:
Memory Dependence Analysis was limited to return only local dependencies
for invariant.group handling. Now it returns NonLocal when it finds it
and then by asking getNonLocalPointerDependency we get found dep.

Thanks to this we are able to devirtualize loops!

    void indirect(A &a, int n) {
      for (int i = 0 ; i < n; i++)
        a.foo();

    }
    void test(int n) {
      A a;
      indirect(a);
    }

After inlining a.foo() will be changed to direct call, even if foo and A::A()
is external (but only if vtable definition is be available).

Reviewers: nlewycky, dberlin, chandlerc, rsmith

Subscribers: mehdi_amini, davide, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28137

llvm-svn: 291762
2017-01-12 11:33:58 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski e41beed403 [MemDep] NFC variable name change
llvm-svn: 291679
2017-01-11 16:23:54 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski 09ad678bc4 [MemDep] NFC walk invariant.group graph only down
Summary:
By using stripPointerCasts we can get to the root
value and then walk down the bitcast graph

Reviewers: reames

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28181

llvm-svn: 291405
2017-01-08 22:26:06 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski da36215017 [MemDep] Handle gep with zeros for invariant.group
Summary:
gep 0, 0 is equivalent to bitcast. LLVM canonicalizes it
to getelementptr because it make SROA can then handle it.

Simple case like

    void g(A &a) {
        z(a);
        if (glob)
            a.foo();
    }
    void testG() {
        A a;
        g(a);
    }

was not devirtualized with -fstrict-vtable-pointers because luck of
handling for gep 0 in Memory Dependence Analysis

Reviewers: dberlin, nlewycky, chandlerc

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28126

llvm-svn: 290763
2016-12-30 18:45:07 +00:00
Chandler Carruth e14524ca30 [PM] Teach MemDep to invalidate its result object when its cached
analysis handles become invalid.

Add a test case for its invalidation logic.

llvm-svn: 290620
2016-12-27 19:33:04 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski 2202aa9765 [MemDep] Operand visited twice bugfix
Because operand was not marked as seen it was visited twice.
It doesn't change behavior of optimization, it just saves redudant
visit, so no test changes.

llvm-svn: 290607
2016-12-27 15:06:07 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski 383edba1fd [MemDep] NFC changes
llvm-svn: 290428
2016-12-23 13:13:32 +00:00
Daniel Jasper aec2fa352f Revert @llvm.assume with operator bundles (r289755-r289757)
This creates non-linear behavior in the inliner (see more details in
r289755's commit thread).

llvm-svn: 290086
2016-12-19 08:22:17 +00:00
Hal Finkel 3ca4a6bcf1 Remove the AssumptionCache
After r289755, the AssumptionCache is no longer needed. Variables affected by
assumptions are now found by using the new operand-bundle-based scheme. This
new scheme is more computationally efficient, and also we need much less
code...

llvm-svn: 289756
2016-12-15 03:02:15 +00:00
Chandler Carruth dab4eae274 [PM] Change the static object whose address is used to uniquely identify
analyses to have a common type which is enforced rather than using
a char object and a `void *` type when used as an identifier.

This has a number of advantages. First, it at least helps some of the
confusion raised in Justin Lebar's code review of why `void *` was being
used everywhere by having a stronger type that connects to documentation
about this.

However, perhaps more importantly, it addresses a serious issue where
the alignment of these pointer-like identifiers was unknown. This made
it hard to use them in pointer-like data structures. We were already
dodging this in dangerous ways to create the "all analyses" entry. In
a subsequent patch I attempted to use these with TinyPtrVector and
things fell apart in a very bad way.

And it isn't just a compile time or type system issue. Worse than that,
the actual alignment of these pointer-like opaque identifiers wasn't
guaranteed to be a useful alignment as they were just characters.

This change introduces a type to use as the "key" object whose address
forms the opaque identifier. This both forces the objects to have proper
alignment, and provides type checking that we get it right everywhere.
It also makes the types somewhat less mysterious than `void *`.

We could go one step further and introduce a truly opaque pointer-like
type to return from the `ID()` static function rather than returning
`AnalysisKey *`, but that didn't seem to be a clear win so this is just
the initial change to get to a reliably typed and aligned object serving
is a key for all the analyses.

Thanks to Richard Smith and Justin Lebar for helping pick plausible
names and avoid making this refactoring many times. =] And thanks to
Sean for the super fast review!

While here, I've tried to move away from the "PassID" nomenclature
entirely as it wasn't really helping and is overloaded with old pass
manager constructs. Now we have IDs for analyses, and key objects whose
address can be used as IDs. Where possible and clear I've shortened this
to just "ID". In a few places I kept "AnalysisID" to make it clear what
was being identified.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27031

llvm-svn: 287783
2016-11-23 17:53:26 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski 01659cb9fe NFC small changes in MemDep
llvm-svn: 286260
2016-11-08 18:20:51 +00:00
Henric Karlsson 54a53bd303 Test commit access (NFC)
llvm-svn: 283439
2016-10-06 10:58:41 +00:00
Dehao Chen 22ce5eb051 Do not widen load for different variable in GVN.
Summary:
Widening load in GVN is too early because it will block other optimizations like PRE, LICM.

https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=29110

The SPECCPU2006 benchmark impact of this patch:

Reference: o2_nopatch
(1): o2_patched

           Benchmark             Base:Reference   (1)  
-------------------------------------------------------
spec/2006/fp/C++/444.namd                  25.2  -0.08%
spec/2006/fp/C++/447.dealII               45.92  +1.05%
spec/2006/fp/C++/450.soplex                41.7  -0.26%
spec/2006/fp/C++/453.povray               35.65  +1.68%
spec/2006/fp/C/433.milc                   23.79  +0.42%
spec/2006/fp/C/470.lbm                    41.88  -1.12%
spec/2006/fp/C/482.sphinx3                47.94  +1.67%
spec/2006/int/C++/471.omnetpp             22.46  -0.36%
spec/2006/int/C++/473.astar               21.19  +0.24%
spec/2006/int/C++/483.xalancbmk           36.09  -0.11%
spec/2006/int/C/400.perlbench             33.28  +1.35%
spec/2006/int/C/401.bzip2                 22.76  -0.04%
spec/2006/int/C/403.gcc                   32.36  +0.12%
spec/2006/int/C/429.mcf                   41.04  -0.41%
spec/2006/int/C/445.gobmk                 26.94  +0.04%
spec/2006/int/C/456.hmmer                  24.5  -0.20%
spec/2006/int/C/458.sjeng                    28  -0.46%
spec/2006/int/C/462.libquantum            55.25  +0.27%
spec/2006/int/C/464.h264ref               45.87  +0.72%

geometric mean                                   +0.23%

For most benchmarks, it's a wash, but we do see stable improvements on some benchmarks, e.g. 447,453,482,400.

Reviewers: davidxl, hfinkel, dberlin, sanjoy, reames

Subscribers: gberry, junbuml

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24096

llvm-svn: 281074
2016-09-09 18:42:35 +00:00
Bob Haarman 3db176410a limit the number of instructions per block examined by dead store elimination
Summary: Dead store elimination gets very expensive when large numbers of instructions need to be analyzed. This patch limits the number of instructions analyzed per store to the value of the memdep-block-scan-limit parameter (which defaults to 100). This resulted in no observed difference in performance of the generated code, and no change in the statistics for the dead store elimination pass, but improved compilation time on some files by more than an order of magnitude.

Reviewers: dexonsmith, bruno, george.burgess.iv, dberlin, reames, davidxl

Subscribers: davide, chandlerc, dberlin, davidxl, eraman, tejohnson, mbodart, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D15537

llvm-svn: 279833
2016-08-26 16:34:27 +00:00
Eugene Zelenko 1804a77b2a Fix some Clang-tidy modernize-use-using and Include What You Use warnings; other minor fixes.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23861

llvm-svn: 279695
2016-08-25 00:45:04 +00:00
Justin Bogner cd1d5aaf2e Replace a few more "fall through" comments with LLVM_FALLTHROUGH
Follow up to r278902. I had missed "fall through", with a space.

llvm-svn: 278970
2016-08-17 20:30:52 +00:00
Sean Silva 36e0d01e13 Consistently use FunctionAnalysisManager
Besides a general consistently benefit, the extra layer of indirection
allows the mechanical part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D23256 that
requires touching every transformation and analysis to be factored out
cleanly.

Thanks to David for the suggestion.

llvm-svn: 278077
2016-08-09 00:28:15 +00:00
Chad Rosier 02e831cf2f Typos. NFC.
llvm-svn: 274038
2016-06-28 17:19:10 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 4dea8f542b Avoid duplicated map lookups. No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 273030
2016-06-17 18:59:41 +00:00
JF Bastien 800f87a871 NFC: make AtomicOrdering an enum class
Summary:
In the context of http://wg21.link/lwg2445 C++ uses the concept of
'stronger' ordering but doesn't define it properly. This should be fixed
in C++17 barring a small question that's still open.

The code currently plays fast and loose with the AtomicOrdering
enum. Using an enum class is one step towards tightening things. I later
also want to tighten related enums, such as clang's
AtomicOrderingKind (which should be shared with LLVM as a 'C++ ABI'
enum).

This change touches a few lines of code which can be improved later, I'd
like to keep it as NFC for now as it's already quite complex. I have
related changes for clang.

As a follow-up I'll add:
  bool operator<(AtomicOrdering, AtomicOrdering) = delete;
  bool operator>(AtomicOrdering, AtomicOrdering) = delete;
  bool operator<=(AtomicOrdering, AtomicOrdering) = delete;
  bool operator>=(AtomicOrdering, AtomicOrdering) = delete;
This is separate so that clang and LLVM changes don't need to be in sync.

Reviewers: jyknight, reames

Subscribers: jyknight, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18775

llvm-svn: 265602
2016-04-06 21:19:33 +00:00
Mehdi Amini 89038a1071 Fix "warning: variabl 'XX’ set but not used" in release build (variable used in assertion, NFC)
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 265220
2016-04-02 05:34:19 +00:00
Philip Reames b5681138e4 Allow value forwarding past release fences in GVN
A release fence acts as a publication barrier for stores within the current thread to become visible to other threads which might observe the release fence. It does not require the current thread to observe stores performed on other threads. As a result, we can allow store-load and load-load forwarding across a release fence.  

We choose to be much more conservative about stores.  In theory, nothing prevents us from shifting a store from after a release fence to before it, and then eliminating the preceeding (previously fenced) store.  Doing this without actually moving the second store is likely also legal, but we chose to be conservative at this time.

The LangRef indicates only atomic loads and stores are effected by fences. This patch chooses to be far more conservative then that. 

This is the GVN companion to http://reviews.llvm.org/D11434 which applied the same logic in EarlyCSE and has been baking in tree for a while now.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11436

llvm-svn: 264472
2016-03-25 22:40:35 +00:00
Chandler Carruth aef32bd319 [memdep] Just require domtree for memdep.
This doesn't cause us to construct dominator trees any more often in the
normal pipeline, and removes an entire mode of memdep that needed to be
reasoned about and maintained. Perhaps more importantly, it removes the
ability for the results of memdep to be different because of accidental
pass scheduling goofs or the order of evaluation of 'getResult' calls.

Essentially, 'getCachedResult', unless across IR-unit boundaries, is
extremely dangerous. We need to work much harder to avoid it (or its
analog in the old pass manager).

llvm-svn: 263232
2016-03-11 13:46:00 +00:00