isl does not guarantee that set dimension ids will be preserved, so using them
to carry information is not a good idea. Furthermore, the loop information can
be derived without problem from the statement itself. As this even requires
less code than propagating loop information on set dimension ids, starting from
this commit we just derive the loop information in collectSurroundingLoops
directly from the IR.
Interestingly this also results in a couple of isl sets to take a simpler
representation.
llvm-svn: 326664
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
These caused LNT failures due to new assertions when running with
-polly-position=before-vectorizer -polly-process-unprofitable for:
FAIL: clamscan.compile_time
FAIL: cjpeg.compile_time
FAIL: consumer-jpeg.compile_time
FAIL: shapes.compile_time
FAIL: clamscan.execution_time
FAIL: cjpeg.execution_time
FAIL: consumer-jpeg.execution_time
FAIL: shapes.execution_time
The failures have been introduced by r264782, but r264789 had to be reverted
as it depended on the earlier patch.
llvm-svn: 264885
As a CFG is often structured we can simplify the steps performed
during domain generation. When we push domain information we can
utilize the information from a block A to build the domain of a
block B, if A dominates B. When we pull domain information we can
use information from a block A to build the domain of a block B
if B post-dominates A. This patch implements both ideas and thereby
simplifies domains that were not simplified by isl. For the FINAL
basic block in
test/ScopInfo/complex-successor-structure-3.ll .
we used to build a universe set with 81 basic sets. Now it actually is
represented as universe set.
While the initial idea to utilize the graph structure depended on the
dominator and post-dominator tree we can use the available region
information as a coarse grained replacement. To this end we push the
region entry domain to the region exit and pull it from the region
entry for the region exit.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18450
llvm-svn: 264789
ISL can conclude additional conditions on parameters from restrictions
on loop variables. Such conditions persist when leaving the loop and the
loop variable is projected out. This results in a narrower domain for
exiting the loop than entering it and is logically impossible for
non-infinite loops.
We fix this by not adding a lower bound i>=0 when constructing BB
domains, but defer it to when also the upper bound it computed, which
was done redundantly even before this patch.
This reduces the number of LNT fails with -polly-process-unprofitable
-polly-position=before-vectorizer from 8 to 6.
llvm-svn: 264118
The previously implemented approach is to follow value definitions and
create write accesses ("push defs") while searching for uses. This
requires the same relatively validity- and requirement conditions to be
replicated at multiple locations (PHI instructions, other instructions,
uses by PHIs).
We replace this by iterating over the uses in a SCoP ("pull in
requirements"), and add writes only when at least one read has been
added. It turns out to be simpler code because each use is only iterated
over once and writes are added for the first access that reads it. We
need another iteration to identify escaping values (uses not in the
SCoP), which also makes the difference between such accesses more
obvious. As a side-effect, the order of scalar MemoryAccess can change.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15706
llvm-svn: 259987
Ensure there is at most one write access per definition of an
llvm::Value. Keep track of already created value write access by using
a (dense) map.
Replace addValueWriteAccess by ensureValueStore which can be uses more
liberally without worrying to add redundant accesses. It will be used,
e.g. in a logical correspondant for value reads -- ensureValueReload --
to ensure that the expected definition has been written when loading it.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15483
llvm-svn: 258807
ISL 0.16 will change how sets are printed which breaks 117 unit tests
that text-compare printed sets. This patch re-formats most of these unit
tests using a script and small manual editing on top of that. When
actually updating ISL, most work is done by just re-running the script
to adapt to the changed output.
Some tests that compare IR and tests with single CHECK-lines that can be
easily updated manually are not included here.
The re-format script will also be committed afterwards. The per-test
formatter invocation command lines options will not be added in the near
future because it is ad hoc and would overwrite the manual edits.
Ideally it also shouldn't be required anymore because ISL's set printing
has become more stable in 0.16.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16095
llvm-svn: 257851
These flags are now always passed to all tests and need to be disabled if
not needed. Disabling these flags, rather than passing them to almost all
tests, significantly simplfies our RUN: lines.
llvm-svn: 249422
If we encounter a <nsw> tagged AddRec for a loop we know the trip count of
that loop has to be bounded or the semantics is undefined anyway. Hence, we
only need to add unbounded assumptions if no such AddRec is known.
llvm-svn: 248128
So far we ignored the unbounded parts of the iteration domain, however
we need to assume they do not occure at all to remain sound if they do.
llvm-svn: 248126
Summary:
When translating PHI nodes into memory dependences during code generation we
require two kinds of memory. 'Normal memory' as for all scalar dependences and
'PHI node memory' to store the incoming values of the PHI node. With this
patch we now mark and track these two kinds of memories, which we previously
incorrectly marked as a single memory object.
Being aware of PHI node storage makes code generation easier, as we do not need
to guess what kind of storage a scalar reference requires. This simplifies the
code nicely.
Reviewers: jdoerfert
Subscribers: pollydev, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11554
llvm-svn: 243420
This removes old code that has been disabled since several weeks and was hidden
behind the flags -disable-polly-intra-scop-scalar-to-array=false and
-polly-model-phi-nodes=false. Earlier, Polly used to translate scalars and
PHI nodes to single element arrays, as this avoided the need for their special
handling in Polly. With Johannes' patches adding native support for such scalar
references to Polly, this code is not needed any more. After this commit both
-polly-prepare and -polly-independent are now mostly no-ops. Only a couple of
simple transformations still remain, but they are scheduled for removal too.
Thanks again to Johannes Doerfert for his nice work in making all this code
obsolete.
llvm-svn: 240766
While looking through the test cases I realized we did not have a CHECK line
for a duplicate memory access which we may want to eliminate later. To ensure
we do not have (or later introduce) unnecessary memory accesses, we now tighten
the test cases to look for such a pattern (and add the CHECK: line that shows
the redundant memory access).
llvm-svn: 238227
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
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