This previously was not required because in an out-of-tree build Polly would
only build libraries (LLVMPolly, libPolly, libPollyISL, libPollyPPCG), but no
executables where the libraries would be linked to. This will change when adding
unittests in a follow-up commit.
llvm-svn: 279730
The program 'llvm-lit', like 'not' and 'FileCheck' are necessary for running
check-polly. Warn of any of the three is not in LLVM_INSTALL_ROOT/bin directory.
llvm-svn: 279728
Dump polyhedral descriptions of Scops optimized with the isl scheduling
optimizer and the set of post-scheduling transformations applied
on the schedule tree to be able to check the work of the IslScheduleOptimizer
pass at the polyhedral level.
Reviewed-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23740
llvm-svn: 279395
getAccessFunctions() is dead code and the 'BB' argument
of getOrCreateAccessFunctions() is not used. This patch deletes
getAccessFunctions and transforms AccFuncMap into
a std::vector<std::unique_ptr<MemoryAccess>> AccessFunctions.
Reviewed-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23759
llvm-svn: 279394
The existing code would add the operands in the wrong order, and eventually
crash because the SCEV expression doesn't exactly match the parameter SCEV
expression in SCEVAffinator::visit. (SCEV doesn't sort the operands to
getMulExpr in general.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23592
llvm-svn: 279087
We already invalidated a couple of critical values earlier on, but we now
invalidate all instructions contained in a scop after the scop has been code
generated. This is necessary as later scops may otherwise obtain SCEV
expressions that reference values in the earlier scop that before dominated
the later scop, but which had been moved into the conditional branch and
consequently do not dominate the later scop any more. If these very values are
then used during code generation of the later scop, we generate used that are
dominated by the values they use.
This fixes: http://llvm.org/PR28984
llvm-svn: 279047
Normally this is ensured when adding PHI nodes, but as PHI node dependences
do not need to be added in case all incoming blocks are within the same
non-affine region, this was missed.
This corrects an issue visible in LNT's sqlite3, in case invariant load hoisting
was disabled.
llvm-svn: 278792
With invariant load hoisting enabled the LLVM buildbots currently show some
miscompiles, which are possibly caused by invariant load hosting itself.
Confirming and fixing this requires a more in-depth analysis. To meanwhile get
back green buildbots that allow us to observe other regressions, we disable
invariant code hoisting temporarily. The relevant bug is tracked at:
http://llvm.org/PR28985
llvm-svn: 278681
This will make it easier to switch the default of Polly's invariant load
hoisting strategy and also makes it very clear that these test cases
indeed require invariant code hoisting to work.
llvm-svn: 278667
This is the third patch to apply the BLIS matmul optimization pattern on matmul
kernels (http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/flame/pubs/TOMS-BLIS-Analytical.pdf).
BLIS implements gemm as three nested loops around a macro-kernel, plus two
packing routines. The macro-kernel is implemented in terms of two additional
loops around a micro-kernel. The micro-kernel is a loop around a rank-1
(i.e., outer product) update. In this change we perform replacement of
the access relations and create empty arrays, which are steps to implement
the packing transformation. In subsequent changes we will implement copying
to created arrays.
Reviewed-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D22187
llvm-svn: 278666
To do so we change the way array exents are computed. Instead of the precise
set of memory locations accessed, we now compute the extent as the range between
minimal and maximal address in the first dimension and the full extent defined
by the sizes of the inner array dimensions.
We also move the computation of the may_persist region after the construction
of the arrays, as it relies on array information. Without arrays being
constructed no useful information is computed at all.
llvm-svn: 278212
Ensure the right scalar allocations are used as the host location of data
transfers. For the device code, we clear the allocation cache before device
code generation to be able to generate new device-specific allocation and
we need to make sure to add back the old host allocations as soon as the
device code generation is finished.
llvm-svn: 278126
This increases the readability of the IR and also clarifies that the GPU
inititialization is executed _after_ the scalar initialization which needs
to before the code of the transformed scop is executed.
Besides increased readability, the IR should not change. Specifically, I
do not expect any changes in program semantics due to this patch.
llvm-svn: 278125
In case some code -- not guarded by control flow -- would be emitted directly in
the start block, it may happen that this code would use uninitalized scalar
values if the scalar initialization is only emitted at the end of the start
block. This is not a problem today in normal Polly, as all statements are
emitted in their own basic blocks, but Polly-ACC emits host-to-device copy
statements into the start block.
Additional Polly-ACC test coverage will be added in subsequent changes that
improve the handling of PHI nodes in Polly-ACC.
llvm-svn: 278124
After having generated the code for a ScopStmt, we run a simple dead-code
elimination that drops all instructions that are known to be and remain unused.
Until this change, we only considered instructions for dead-code elimination, if
they have a corresponding instruction in the original BB that belongs to
ScopStmt. However, when generating code we do not only copy code from the BB
belonging to a ScopStmt, but also generate code for operands referenced from BB.
After this change, we now also considers code for dead code elimination, which
does not have a corresponding instruction in BB.
This fixes a bug in Polly-ACC where such dead-code referenced CPU code from
within a GPU kernel, which is possible as we do not guarantee that all variables
that are used in known-dead-code are moved to the GPU.
llvm-svn: 278103
The function expandRegion() frees Region* objects again when it determines that
these are not valid SCoPs. However, the DetectionContext added to the
DetectionContextMap still holds a reference. The validity is checked using the
ValidRegions lookup table. When a new Region is added to that list, it might
share the same address, such that the DetectionContext contains two
Region* associations that are in ValidRegions, but that are unrelated and of
which one has already been free.
Also remove the DetectionContext when not a valid expansion.
llvm-svn: 278062
When adding code that avoids to pass values used in isl expressions and
LLVM instructions twice, we forgot to make single variable passed to the
kernel available in the ValueMap that makes it usable for instructions that
are not replaced with isl ast expressions. This change adds the variable
that is passed to the kernel to the ValueMap to ensure it is available
for such use cases as well.
llvm-svn: 278039
There is no need to reset the position of the builder, as we can just continue
to insert code at the current position of the IRBuilder, which happens to
be precisely the location we reset the builder to.
llvm-svn: 278014
... instead of adding instructions at the end of the basic block the builder
is currently at. This makes it easier to reason about where IR is generated,
as with the IRBuilder there is just a single location that specificies where
IR is generated.
llvm-svn: 278013
The map is iterated over when generating the values escaping the SCoP. The
indeterministic iteration order of DenseMap causes the output IR to change at
every compilation, adding noise to comparisons.
Replace DenseMap by a MapVector to ensure the same iteration order at every
compilation.
llvm-svn: 277832
When entering the dependence computation and the max_operations is set, the
operations counter may have already exceeded the counter, thus aborting any ISL
computation from the start. The counter is reset at the end of the dependence
calculation such that a follow-up recomputation might succeed, ie. the success
of the first dependence calculation depends on unrelated ISL operations that
happened before, giving it a disadvantage to the following calculations.
This patch resets the operations counter at the beginning of the dependence
recalculation to not depend on previous actions. Otherwise additional
preprocessing of the Scop that aims to improve its schedulability (eg. DeLICM)
do have the effect that DependenceInfo and hence the scheduling fail more
likely, contraproductive to the goal of said preprocessing.
llvm-svn: 277810
Before this commit we generated the array type in reverse order and we also
added the outermost dimension size to the new array declaration, which is
incorrect as Polly additionally assumed an additional unsized outermost
dimension, such that we had an off-by-one error in the linearization of access
expressions.
llvm-svn: 277802
These annotations ensure that the NVIDIA PTX assembler limits the number of
registers used such that we can be certain the resulting kernel can be executed
for the number of threads in a thread block that we are planning to use.
llvm-svn: 277799
Pass the content of scalar array references to the alloca on the kernel side
and do not pass them additional as normal LLVM scalar value.
llvm-svn: 277699
Otherwise, we would try to re-optimize them with Polly-ACC and possibly even
generate kernels that try to offload themselves, which does not work as the
GPURuntime is not available on the accelerator and also does not make any
sense.
llvm-svn: 277589
Extend the jscop interface to allow the user to export arrays. It is required
that already existing arrays of the list of arrays correspond to arrays
of the SCoP. Each array that is appended to the list will be newly created.
Furthermore, we allow the user to modify access expressions to reference
any array in case it has the same element type.
Reviewed-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22828
llvm-svn: 277263
Before this change we used the array index, which would result in us accessing
the parameter array out-of-bounds. This bug was visible for test cases where not
all arrays in a scop are passed to a given kernel.
llvm-svn: 276961
Adding a new pass PolyhedralInfo. This pass will be the interface to Polly.
Initially, we will provide the following interface:
- #IsParallel(Loop *L) - return a bool depending on whether the loop is
parallel or not for the given program order.
Patch by Utpal Bora <cs14mtech11017@iith.ac.in>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21486
llvm-svn: 276637
Also factor out getArraySize() to avoid code dupliciation and reorder some
function arguments to indicate the direction into which data is transferred.
llvm-svn: 276636
At the beginning of each SCoP, we allocate device arrays for all arrays
used on the GPU and we free such arrays after the SCoP has been executed.
llvm-svn: 276635
This function is currently unused and won't be used in this form again. Instead
of freeing many unrelated items at the same time, we will instead explicitly
call free function from the host-IR we generate for each object we want to free.
These specific free functions will be added together with the corresponding
host-IR generation code.
llvm-svn: 276632
Do not process SCoPs with infeasible runtime context in the new
ScopInfoWrapperPass. Do not compute dependences for such SCoPs in the new
DependenceInfoWrapperPass.
Patch by Utpal Bora <cs14mtech11017@iith.ac.in>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22402
llvm-svn: 276631
This is the second patch to apply the BLIS matmul optimization pattern
on matmul kernels
(http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/flame/pubs/TOMS-BLIS-Analytical.pdf).
BLIS implements gemm as three nested loops around a macro-kernel, plus
two packing routines. The macro-kernel is implemented in terms
of two additional loops around a micro-kernel. The micro-kernel
is a loop around a rank-1 (i.e., outer product) update. In this change
we create the BLIS macro-kernel by applying a combination of tiling
and interchanging. In subsequent changes we will implement the packing
transformation.
Reviewed-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21491
llvm-svn: 276627
There is no need to expose the selected device at the moment. We also pass back
pointers as return values, as this simplifies the interface.
llvm-svn: 276623
This allows the finalization routine of the IslNodeBuilder to be overwritten
by derived classes. Being here, we also drop the unnecessary 'Scop' postfix
and the unnecessary 'Scop' parameter.
llvm-svn: 276622
Before this change, the debug statements in polly_initDevice would all be
skipped, as debug-mode would only be enabled _after_ they have already been run.
llvm-svn: 276621
This functionality won't be used in the current iteration. Drop it for now to
reduce the surface of the library. We can always add it back in when we need
it again.
llvm-svn: 276611
We optimize the kernel _after_ dumping the IR we generate to make the IR we
dump easier readable and independent of possible changes in the general
purpose LLVM optimizers.
llvm-svn: 276551
Run the NVPTX backend over the GPUModule IR and write the resulting assembly
code in a string.
To work correctly, it is important to invalidate analysis results that still
reference the IR in the kernel module. Hence, this change clears all references
to dominators, loop info, and scalar evolution.
Finally, the NVPTX backend has troubles to generate code for various special
floating point types (not surprising), but also for uncommon integer types. This
commit does not resolve these issues, but pulls out problematic test cases into
separate files to XFAIL them individually and resolve them in future (not
immediate) changes one by one.
llvm-svn: 276396
This change introduces the actual compute code in the GPU kernels. To ensure
all values referenced from the statements in the GPU kernel are indeed available
we scan all ScopStmts in the GPU kernel for references to llvm::Values that
are not yet covered by already modeled outer loop iterators, parameters, or
array base pointers and also pass these additional llvm::Values to the
GPU kernel.
For arrays used in the GPU kernel we introduce a new ScopArrayInfo object, which
is referenced by the newly generated access functions within the GPU kernel and
which is used to help with code generation.
llvm-svn: 276270
This is useful for external users using IslExprBuilder, in case they cannot
embed ScopArrayInfo data into their isl_ids, because the isl_ids either already
carry other information or the isl_ids have been created and their user pointers
cannot be updated any more.
llvm-svn: 276268
This ensures that no trivially dead code is generated. This is not only cleaner,
but also avoids troubles in case code is generated in a separate function and
some of this dead code contains references to values that are not available.
This issue may happen, in case the memory access functions have been updated
and old getelementptr instructions remain in the code. With normal Polly,
a test case is difficult to draft, but the upcoming GPU code generation can
possibly trigger such problems. We will later extend this dead-code elimination
to region and vector statements.
llvm-svn: 276263
It seems the order in which we generated memory accesses changed such that
the import of these updated memory accesses failed for the 'loop3' statement
in this test case. Unfortunately, the existing CHECK lines were not strict
enough to catch this. Hence, besides fixing the order of the memory access
lines we also ensure that the memory access changes are both clearly visibly
and well checked.
llvm-svn: 276247
This makes the structure of the code clearer and reduces the size of runOnScop.
We also adjust the coding style to the latest LLVM style guide.
llvm-svn: 276246
This makes the structure of the code clearer and reduces the size of runOnScop.
We also adjust the coding style to the latest LLVM style guide.
llvm-svn: 276245
This makes the structure of the code clearer and reduces the size of runOnScop.
We also adjust the coding style to the latest LLVM style guide.
llvm-svn: 276244
This is currently not supported and will only be added later. Also update the
test cases to ensure no invariant code hoisting is applied.
llvm-svn: 275987
This simplifies the upcoming patches to add code generation for ScopStmts. Load
hoisting support will later be added in a separate commit. This commit will
be implicitly tested by the subsequent GPGPU changes.
llvm-svn: 275969
We use this opportunity to further classify the different user statements that
can arise and add TODOs for the ones not yet implemented.
llvm-svn: 275957
Create for each kernel a separate LLVM-IR module containing a single function
marked as kernel function and taking one pointer for each array referenced
by this kernel. Add debugging output to verify the kernels are generated
correctly.
llvm-svn: 275952
Initialize the list of references to a GPU array to ensure that the arrays that
need to be passed to kernel calls are computed correctly. Furthermore, the very
same information is also necessary to compute synchronization correctly. As the
functionality to compute these references is already available, what is left for
us to do is only to connect the necessary functionality to compute array
reference information.
llvm-svn: 275798
Create LLVM-IR for all host-side control flow of a given GPU AST. We implement
this by introducing a new GPUNodeBuilder class derived from IslNodeBuilder. The
IslNodeBuilder will take care of generating all general-purpose ast nodes, but
we provide our own createUser implementation to handle the different GPU
specific user statements. For now, we just skip any user statement and only
generate a host-code sceleton, but in subsequent commits we will add handling of
normal ScopStmt's performing computations, kernel calls, as well as host-device
data transfers. We will also introduce run-time check generation and LICM in
subsequent commits.
llvm-svn: 275783
This ensures that accidental calls to these functions will break loadly instead
of corrupting the stack with invalid return values.
These functions have been introduced earlier as replacement of pet and parts of
ppcg which we will never use and consequently have not been imported or compiled
into Polly.
llvm-svn: 275680
Otherwise ppcg would try to call into pet functionality that this not available,
which obviously will cause trouble. As we can easily print these statements
ourselves, we just do so.
llvm-svn: 275579
This option increases the scalability of the scheduler and allows us to remove
the 'gisting' workaround we introduced in r275565 to handle a more complicated
test case. Another benefit of using this option is also that the generated
code looks a lot more streamlined.
Thanks to Sven Verdoolaege for reminding me of this option.
llvm-svn: 275573
This works around a shortcoming of the isl scheduler, which even for some
smaller test cases does not terminate in case domain constraints are part
of the flow dependences.
llvm-svn: 275565
It seems we forgot to actually add the memory access ids to the tagged accesses,
but instead just tagged the accesses with empty isl_ids. This issue was found
by inspection and without code generation it is difficult to test just by
itself. We fix it for now without test case and expect our code generation
tests to cover this later on.
llvm-svn: 275557
We do not have them in Polly and the code to check for them is directly
referring to pet data structures which we do not have available.
This commit avoids undefined behavior. As such issues are difficult to
reproduce, this commit comes without a test case.
llvm-svn: 275553
Arrays with integer base type are similar to arrays with floating point types,
with the exception that LLVM's integer types can take some odd values. We
add a selection of different values to make sure we correctly round these
types when necessary.
References to scalar integer types are special, as we currently do not model
these types as array accesses as they are considered 'synthesizable' by Polly.
As a result, we do not generate explicit data-transfers for them, but instead
will need to keep track of all references to 'synthesizable' values separately.
At the current stage, this is only visible by missing host-to-device
data-transfer calls. In the future, we will also require special code generation
strategies.
llvm-svn: 275551
We currently only test that the code structure we generate for these scalar
parameters is correct and we add these types to make sure later code generation
additions have sufficient test coverage.
In case some of these types cannot be mapped due to missing hardware support
on the GPU some of these test cases may need to be updated later on.
llvm-svn: 275548
Instead of directly linking to ppcg's main source directory, we link to the
parent director. This allows us to access ppcg's include files with
'ppcg/cuda.h' and avoids a conflict with NVIDIA's cuda.h header.
Also drop an include directory that is currently not used.
llvm-svn: 275536
A sequence of CHECK lines allows additional statements to appear in the
output of the tested program without any test failures appearing. As we do
not want this to happen, switch this test case to use CHECK-NEXT.
llvm-svn: 275534
For this we need to provide an explicit list of statements as they occur in
the polly::Scop to ppcg.
We also setup basic AST printing facilities to facilitate debugging. To allow
code reuse some (minor) changes in ppcg are have been necessary.
llvm-svn: 275436
Instead of calling to a pet function that does not return anything, we pass
our own dummy implementation to ppcg that always returns a nullptr. This
ensures that the list of ast expressions always contains a nullptr and we do
not accidentally free a random (uninitalized) pointer. This resolves the
last valgrind warning we see.
We provide an implementation for this function, when the generated AST
expressions can be used and consequently can be tested.
llvm-svn: 275435
The tile size was previously uninitialized. As a result, it was often zero (aka.
no tiling), which is not what we want in general. More importantly, there was
the risk for arbitrary tile sizes to be choosen, which we did not observe, but
which still is highly problematic.
llvm-svn: 275418
This change now applies ppcg's GPU mapping on our initial schedule. For this
to work, we need to also initialize the set of all names (isl_ids) used in
the scop as well as the program context.
llvm-svn: 275396
To do so we copy the necessary information to compute an initial schedule from
polly::Scop to ppcg's scop. Most of the necessary information is directly
available and only needs to be passed on to ppcg, with the exception of 'tagged'
access relations, access relations that additionally carry information about
which memory access an access relation originates from.
We could possibly perform the construction of tagged accesses as part of
ScopInfo, but as this format is currently specific to ppcg we do not do this
yet, but keep this functionality local to our GPU code generation.
After the scop has been initialized, we compute data dependences and ask ppcg to
compute an initial schedule. Some of this functionality is already available in
polly::DependenceInfo and polly::ScheduleOptimizer, but to keep differences
to ppcg small we use ppcg's functionality here. We may later investiage if
a closer integration of these tools makes sense.
llvm-svn: 275390
At this stage, we do not yet modify the IR but just generate a default
initialized ppcg_scop and gpu_prog and free both immediately. Both will later be
filled with data from the polly::Scop and are needed to use PPCG for GPU
schedule generation. This commit does not yet perform any GPU code generation,
but ensures that the basic infrastructure has been put in place.
We also add a simple test case to ensure the new code is run and use this
opportunity to verify that GPU_CODEGEN tests are only run if GPU code generation
has been enabled in cmake.
llvm-svn: 275389
Add a new pass to serve as basis for automatic accelerator mapping in Polly.
The pass structure and the analyses preserved are copied from
CodeGeneration.cpp, as we will rely on IslNodeBuilder and IslExprBuilder for
LLVM-IR code generation.
Polly's accelerator code generation is enabled with -polly-target=gpu
I would like to use this commit as opportunity to thank Yabin Hu for his work in
the context of two Google summer of code projects during which he implemented
initial prototypes of the Polly accelerator code generation -- in parts this
code is already available in todays Polly (e.g., tools/GPURuntime). More will
come as part of the upcoming Polly ACC changes.
Reviewers: Meinersbur
Subscribers: pollydev, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D22036
llvm-svn: 275275
ppcg will be used to provide mapping decisions for GPU code generation.
As we do not use C as input language, we do not include pet. However, we include
pet.h from pet 82cacb71 plus a set of dummy functions to ensure ppcg links
without problems.
The version of ppcg committed is unmodified ppcg-0.04 which has been well tested
in the context of LLVM. It does not provide an official library interface yet,
which means that in upcoming commits we will add minor modifications to make
necessary functionality accessible. We will aim to upstream these modifications
after we gained enough experience with GPU generation support in Polly to
propose a stable interface.
Reviewers: Meinersbur
Subscribers: pollydev, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D22033
llvm-svn: 275274
Check not only that the compiler is not crashing, but also whether the
probablematic part (The sequence of instructions simplified to '4') is reflected
in the output.
Thanks to Tobias for the hint.
llvm-svn: 275189
An assertion in visitSDivInstruction() checked whether the divisor is constant
by checking whether the argument is a ConstantInt. However, SCEVValidator allows
the divisor to be simplified to a constant by ScalarEvolution.
We synchronize the implementation of SCEVValidator and SCEVAffinator to both
accept simplified SCEV expressions.
llvm-svn: 275174
Summary: LLVM adds a new value FMRB_DoesNotReadMemory in the enumeration.
Reviewers: andrew.w.kaylor, chrisj, zinob, grosser, jdoerfert
Subscribers: Meinersbur, pollydev
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D22109
llvm-svn: 275085
Commit r275056 introduced a gcc compile failure due to us using two
types named 'Type', the first being the newly introduced member variable
'Type' the second being llvm::Type. We resolve this issue by renaming
the newly introduced member variable to AccessType.
llvm-svn: 275057
Summary:
With a struct we can use named accessors instead of generic std::get<3>()
calls. This increases readability of the source code.
Reviewers: jdoerfert
Subscribers: pollydev, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21955
llvm-svn: 275056
We now compute the invalid context of memory accesses only for the domain under
which the memory access is executed. Without limiting ourselves to this
restricted domain, invalid accesses outside of the domain of actually executed
statement instances may result in the execution domain of the statement to
become empty despite the fact that the statement will actually be executed. As a
result, such scops would use unitialized values for their computations which
results in incorrect computations.
This fixes http://llvm.org/PR27944 and unbreaks the
-polly-position=before-vectorizer buildbots.
llvm-svn: 275053
For llvm the memory accesses from nonaffine loops should be visible,
however for polly those nonaffine loops should be invisible/boxed.
This fixes llvm.org/PR28245
Cointributed-by: Huihui Zhang <huihuiz@codeaurora.org>
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21591
llvm-svn: 274842
This is a regular maintenance update to ensure the latest version of isl is
tested.
Interesting Changes:
- AST nodes and expressions are now printed as YAML
llvm-svn: 274614
There is function is currently unused and will be replaced in the future by
functions that allow to allocate memory only on the host or only on the device.
llvm-svn: 274597
When setting the POLLY_DEBUG environment variable, on calls to the run-time
library the name of the function called is printed to stderr.
llvm-svn: 274596
There is no need to specifically match for isl, but we can exclude anything in
lib/External from formatting as we assume that externally contributed code
should always match the upstream code. This simplifies the cmake script and
allows additional external projects to be added without the need to explicitly
exclude them from formatting.
llvm-svn: 274557
Since r274197 -polly-position=before-vectorizer caused various LNT failures
for example in SingleSource/Benchmarks/Linpack. These failures seem to only
occur when the CFLAA pass is scheduled in our codegen-cleanup passes, which
suggests that the way we call this AA pass is somehow problematic. As this pass
is not of high importance, we drop the pass for now to prevent these failures
from happening. At a later point, we might investigate more in-depth why this
specific usage scenario caused correctness issues.
llvm-svn: 274427
These iterators are provided to complete the interface with non-range iterators
and are useful for external users of ScopInfo. To ensure they are tested we
use them to implement the existing range iterators.
llvm-svn: 274276
This ensures that the error status set with -polly-on-isl-error-abort is
maintained even after running DependenceInfo and ScheduleOptimizer. Both
passes temporarily set the error status to CONTINUE as the dependence
analysis uses a compute-out and the scheduler may not be able to derive
a schedule. In both cases we want to not abort, but to handle the error
gracefully. Before this commit, we always set the error reporting to ABORT
after these passes. After this commit, we use the error reporting mode that was
active earlier.
This comes without a test case as this would require us to introduce (memory)
errors which would trigger the isl errors.
llvm-svn: 274272
It is only used internally by the ScopInfo pass. By moving it into its
own header file we avoid it being processed that use only ScopInfo.
llvm-svn: 273983
The methods in ScopBuilder are used for the construction of a Scop,
while the remaining classes of ScopInfo are required by all passes that
use Polly's polyhedral analysis.
llvm-svn: 273982
This function is used by both ScopInfo and ScopBuilder. A common
location for this function is required when ScopInfo and ScopBuilder are
separated into separate files in the next commit.
llvm-svn: 273981
Reject and report regions that contains loops overlapping nonaffine region.
This situation typically happens in the presence of inifinite loops.
This addresses bug llvm.org/PR28071.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21312
Contributed-by: Huihui Zhang <huihuiz@codeaurora.org>
llvm-svn: 273905
This patch addresses:
- A new function pass to compute polyhedral dependences. This is
required to avoid the region pass manager.
- Stores a map of Scop to Dependence object for all the scops present
in a function. By default, access wise dependences are stored.
Patch by Utpal Bora <cs14mtech11017@iith.ac.in>
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21105
llvm-svn: 273881
This patch adds a new function pass ScopInfoWrapperPass so that the
polyhedral description of a region, the SCoP, can be constructed and
used in a function pass.
Patch by Utpal Bora <cs14mtech11017@iith.ac.in>
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20962
llvm-svn: 273856
1. SCoP object is not owned by ScopBuilder. It just creates a SCoP and
hand over ownership through getScop() method.
2. ScopInfoRegionPass owns the SCoP object for a given region.
Patch by Utpal Bora <cs14mtech11017@iith.ac.in>
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20912
llvm-svn: 273855
llvm commonly adds a comment to the closing brace of a namespace to indicate
which namespace is closed. clang-tidy provides with llvm-namespace-comment
a handy tool to check for this habit. We use it to ensure we consitently use
namespace comments in Polly.
There are slightly different styles in how namespaces are closed in LLVM. As
there is no large difference between the different comment styles we go for the
style clang-tidy suggests by default.
To reproduce this fix run:
for i in `ls tools/polly/lib/*/*.cpp`; \
clang-tidy -checks='-*,llvm-namespace-comment' -p build $i -fix \
-header-filter=".*"; \
done
This cleanup was suggested by Eugene Zelenko <eugene.zelenko@gmail.com> in
http://reviews.llvm.org/D21488 and was split out to increase readability.
llvm-svn: 273621
This addresses warnings produced by clang's -Wextra-semi.
This cleanup was suggested by Eugene Zelenko <eugene.zelenko@gmail.com> in
http://reviews.llvm.org/D21488 and was split out to increase readability.
llvm-svn: 273607
This cleanup was suggested by Eugene Zelenko <eugene.zelenko@gmail.com> in
http://reviews.llvm.org/D21488 and was split out to increase readability.
llvm-svn: 273437
This cleanup was suggested by Eugene Zelenko <eugene.zelenko@gmail.com> in
http://reviews.llvm.org/D21488 and was split out to increase readability.
llvm-svn: 273436
Instead of using 0 or NULL use the C++11 nullptr symbol when referencing null
pointers.
This cleanup was suggested by Eugene Zelenko <eugene.zelenko@gmail.com> in
http://reviews.llvm.org/D21488 and was split out to increase readability.
llvm-svn: 273435
This is the first patch to apply the BLIS matmul optimization pattern
on matmul kernels
(http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/flame/pubs/TOMS-BLIS-Analytical.pdf).
BLIS implements gemm as three nested loops around a macro-kernel,
plus two packing routines. The macro-kernel is implemented in terms
of two additional loops around a micro-kernel. The micro-kernel
is a loop around a rank-1 (i.e., outer product) update.
In this change we create the BLIS micro-kernel by applying
a combination of tiling and unrolling. In subsequent changes
we will add the extraction of the BLIS macro-kernel
and implement the packing transformation.
Contributed-by: Roman Gareev <gareevroman@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21140
llvm-svn: 273397
ScalarReplAggregatesPass was deprecated and replaced by SROAPass.
ScalarReplAggregatesPass got finally removed in LLVM commit r272737, hence this
patch is also a compile fix.
llvm-svn: 272783
As part of this simplification we pull complex logic out of the loop body and
skip the previously redundantly executed first loop iteration.
This is a partial recommit of r271514 and r271535 which where in conflict with
the revert in r272483 and consequently also had to be reverted temporarily. The
original patch was contributed by Johannes Doerfert.
This patch is mostly a NFC, but dropping the first loop iteration can sometimes
result in slightly simpler code.
llvm-svn: 272502
With this update the isl AST generation extracts disjunctive constraints early
on. As a result, code that previously resulted in two branches with (close-to)
identical code within them:
if (P <= -1) {
for (int c0 = 0; c0 < N; c0 += 1)
Stmt_store(c0);
} else if (P >= 1)
for (int c0 = 0; c0 < N; c0 += 1)
Stmt_store(c0);
results now in only a single branch body:
if (P <= -1 || P >= 1)
for (int c0 = 0; c0 < N; c0 += 1)
Stmt_store(c0);
This resolves http://llvm.org/PR27559
Besides the above change, this isl update brings better simplification of
sets/maps containing existentially quantified dimensions and fixes a bug in
isl's coalescing.
llvm-svn: 272500
As these test cases will be changed in a subsequent commit, we expand and
tighten them to make the subsequent changes to them more obvious. As part of
this we add more context to some test cases and add CHECK-NEXT lines to ensure
no intermediate lines are missed by accident.
llvm-svn: 272499
IntToPtr and PtrToInt instructions are basically no-ops that we can handle as
such. In order to generate them properly as parameters we had to improve the
ScopExpander, though the change is the first in the direction of a more
aggressive scalar synthetization.
This patch was originally contributed by Johannes Doerfert in r271888, but was
in conflict with the revert in r272483. This is a recommit with some minor
adjustment to the test cases to take care of differing instruction names.
llvm-svn: 272485
The recent expression type changes still need more discussion, which will happen
on phabricator or on the mailing list. The precise list of commits reverted are:
- "Refactor division generation code"
- "[NFC] Generate runtime checks after the SCoP"
- "[FIX] Determine insertion point during SCEV expansion"
- "Look through IntToPtr & PtrToInt instructions"
- "Use minimal types for generated expressions"
- "Temporarily promote values to i64 again"
- "[NFC] Avoid unnecessary comparison for min/max expressions"
- "[Polly] Fix -Wunused-variable warnings (NFC)"
- "[NFC] Simplify min/max expression generation"
- "Simplify the type adjustment in the IslExprBuilder"
Some of them are just reverted as we would otherwise get conflicts. I will try
to re-commit them if possible.
llvm-svn: 272483
The 'Color' enum is only used for irreducible control flow detection. Johannes
already moved this enum in r270054 from ScopDetection.h to ScopDetection.cpp to
limit its scope to a single cpp file. We now move it into the only function
where this enum is needed to make clear that it is only needed locally in this
single function.
Thanks to Johannes for pointing out this cleanup opportunity.
llvm-svn: 272462
This patch refactors the code generation for divisions. This allows to
always generate a shift for a power-of-two division and to utilize
information about constant divisors in order to truncate the result
type.
llvm-svn: 271898
We now generate runtime checks __after__ the SCoP code generation and
not before, though they are still inserted at the same position int
the code. This allows to modify the runtime check during SCoP code
generation.
llvm-svn: 271894
IntToPtr and PtrToInt instructions are basically no-ops that we can handle as
such. In order to generate them properly as parameters we had to improve the
ScopExpander, though the change is the first in the direction of a more
aggressive scalar synthetization.
llvm-svn: 271888
We now use the minimal necessary bit width for the generated code. If
operations might overflow (add/sub/mul) we will try to adjust the types in
order to ensure a non-wrapping computation. If the type adjustment is not
possible, thus the necessary type is bigger than the type value of
--polly-max-expr-bit-width, we will use assumptions to verify the computation
will not wrap. However, for run-time checks we cannot build assumptions but
instead utilize overflow tracking intrinsics.
llvm-svn: 271878
In case of modulo compared to zero, we need to do signed modulo
operation as unsigned can give different results based on whether the
dividend is negative or not.
This addresses llvm.org/PR27707
Contributed-by: Chris Jenneisch <chrisj@codeaurora.org>
Reviewers: _jdoerfert, grosser, Meinersbur
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20145
llvm-svn: 271707
Operands of binary operations that might overflow will be temporarily
promoted to i64 again, though that is not a sound solution for the problem.
llvm-svn: 271538
Summary:
After rL271151 (SCEV change) SCEV no longer unconditionally transfers
nuw/nsw from the increment operation to the post-inc value; this
transfer only happens if there is undefined behavior in the program if
the increment overflowed (as opposed to just generating poison).
The loops in `wraping_signed_expr_1.ll` are in non-canonical
form (they're not rotated), and that defeats LLVM's poison-is-UB
analysis. IMO the easiest fix here is to run `wraping_signed_expr_1.ll`
through `-loop-rotate` to canonicalize the loops, which is what this
patch does.
Reviewers: jdoerfert, Meinersbur, grosser
Subscribers: grosser, mcrosier, pollydev
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20778
llvm-svn: 271536
We now have a simple function to adjust/unify the types of two (or three)
operands before an operation that requieres the same type for all operands.
Due to this change we will not promote parameters that are added to i64
anymore if that is not needed.
llvm-svn: 271513
multiplication
Fix small issues related to characters, operators and descriptions of tests.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20806
llvm-svn: 271264
Created a new pass ScopInfoRegionPass. As name suggests, it is a
region pass and it is there to preserve compatibility with our
existing Polly passes. ScopInfoRegionPass will return a SCoP object
for a valid region while the creation of the SCoP stays in the
ScopInfo class.
Contributed-by: Utpal Bora <cs14mtech11017@iith.ac.in>
Reviewed-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>,
Johannes Doerfert <doerfert@cs.uni-saarland.de>
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20770
llvm-svn: 271259
This header is required to make the ISO 646 alternative operator
spellings ("and", "or" instead of "&&", "||") work. Should these
operators be replaced by the standard ones as already suggested by
Johannes, also remove this #include again.
llvm-svn: 271206
Summary:
API-wise `apply` is a somewhat unidiomatic one-off function, and
removing the only(?) use in polly will let me remove it from SCEV's
exposed interface.
Reviewers: jdoerfert, Meinersbur, grosser
Subscribers: grosser, mcrosier, pollydev
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20779
llvm-svn: 271177
Add determination of statements that contain, in particular,
matrix multiplications and can be optimized with [1] to try to
get close-to-peak performance. It can be enabled
via polly-pm-based-opts, which is false by default.
Refs:
[1] - http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/flame/pubs/TOMS-BLIS-Analytical.pdf
Contributed-by: Roman Gareev <gareevroman@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20575
llvm-svn: 271128
Before this patch we bailed if a required invariant load was potentially
overwritten. However, now we will optimistically assume it is actually
invariant and, to this end, restrict the valid parameter space as well as the
execution context with regards to potential overwrites of the location.
llvm-svn: 270416
Since the base pointer of a possibly aliasing pointer might not alias
with any other pointer it (the base pointer) might not be tagged as
"required invariant". However, we need it do be in order to compare
the accessed addresses of the derived (possibly aliasing) pointer.
This patch also tries to clean up the load hoisting a little bit.
llvm-svn: 270412
So far we bailed if a required invariant load was potentially overwritten in
the SCoP. From now on we will optimistically assume it is actually invariant
and, to this end, restrict the valid parameter space.
llvm-svn: 270060
The SCoP now holds a reference to the ScopDetection::DetectionContext
which allows to simplify the type of various methods and remove code.
llvm-svn: 270053
Before this patch we only expanded valid __and__ profitable region. Therefor
we did not allow the expansion to create a profitable region from a
non-profitable one. With this patch we will remember and expand all valid
regions and check for profitability only at the end.
This patch increases the number of valid SCoPs in the LLVM-TS and SPEC
2000/2006 by 28% (from 303 to 390), including the hot loop in hmmer.
llvm-svn: 269343
This patch cleans up the rejection log handling during the
ScopDetection. It consists of two interconnected parts:
- We keep all detection contexts for a function in order to provide
more information to the user, e.g., about the rejection of
extended/intermediate regions.
- We remove the mutable "RejectLogs" member as the information is
available through the detection contexts.
llvm-svn: 269323
Truncate operations are basically modulo operations, thus we can model
them that way. However, for large types we assume the operand to fit
in the new type size instead of introducing a modulo with a very large
constant.
llvm-svn: 269300
We utilize assumptions on the input to model IR in polyhedral world.
To verify these assumptions we version the code and guard it with a
runtime-check (RTC). However, since the RTCs are themselves generated
from the polyhedral representation we generate them under the same
assumptions that they should verify. In other words, the guarantees
that we try to provide with the RTCs do not hold for the RTCs
themselves. To this end it is necessary to employ a different check
for the RTCs that will verify the assumptions did hold for them too.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20165
llvm-svn: 269299
If a profitable run is performed we will check if the SCoP seems to be
profitable after creation but before e.g., dependence are computed. This is
needed as SCoP detection only approximates the actual SCoP representation.
In the end this should allow us to be less conservative during the SCoP
detection while keeping the compile time in check.
llvm-svn: 269074
Regions with one affine loop can be profitable if the loop is
distributable. To this end we will allow them to be treated as
profitable if they contain at least two non-trivial basic blocks.
llvm-svn: 269064
The assumption attached to an llvm.assume in the SCoP needs to be
combined with the domain of the surrounding statement but can
nevertheless be used to refine the context.
This fixes the problems mentioned in PR27067.
llvm-svn: 269060
This patches makes the propagation of complexity problems during
domain generation consistent. Additionally, it makes it less likely to
encounter ill-formed domains later, e.g., during schedule generation.
llvm-svn: 269055
Before this patch we generated error-restrictions only for
error-blocks, thus blocks (or regions) containing a not represented
function call. However, the same reasoning is needed if the invalid
domain of a statement subsumes its actual domain. To this end we move
the generation of error-restrictions after the propagation of the
invalid domains. Consequently, error-statements are now defined more
general as statements that are assumed to be not executed.
Additionally, we do not record an empty domain for such statements but
a nullptr instead. This allows to distinguish between error-statements
and dead-statements.
llvm-svn: 269053
We now use context information to simplify the domains and access
functions of the SCoP instead of just aligning them with the parameter
space.
llvm-svn: 269048