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58 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Shuxin Yang
ea044d82e0 Fix a defect in code-layout pass, improving Benchmarks/Olden/em3d/em3d by about 30%
(4.58s vs 3.2s on an oldish Mac Tower). 

  The corresponding src is excerpted bellow. The lopp accounts for about 90% of execution time.
  --------------------
    cat -n test-suite/MultiSource/Benchmarks/Olden/em3d/make_graph.c
     90 
     91         for (k=0; k<j; k++)
     92           if (other_node == cur_node->to_nodes[k]) break;

  The defective layout is sketched bellow, where the two branches need to swap.
  ------------------------------------------------------------------------
      L:
         ...
      if (cond) goto out-of-loop
      goto L

  While this code sequence is defective, I don't understand why it incurs 1/3 of 
execution time. CPU-event-profiling indicates the poor laoyout dose not increase
in br-misprediction; it dosen't increase stall cycle at all, and it dosen't 
prevent the CPU detect the loop (i.e. Loop-Stream-Detector seems to be working fine
as well)... 

   The root cause of the problem is that the layout pass calls AnalyzeBranch() 
with basic-block which is not updated to reflect its current layout.

rdar://13966341

llvm-svn: 183174
2013-06-04 01:00:57 +00:00
Nadav Rotem
9cfc1da8c2 Don't disable block layout when forcing block alignment.
llvm-svn: 179355
2013-04-12 01:24:16 +00:00
Nadav Rotem
662256bafa Add a flag to align all basic blocks in the function.
When debugging performance regressions we often ask ourselves if the regression
that we see is due to poor isel/sched/ra or due to some micro-architetural
problem.  When comparing two code sequences one good way to rule out front-end
bottlenecks (and other the issues) is to force code alignment. This pass adds
a flag that forces the alignment of all of the basic blocks in the program.

llvm-svn: 179353
2013-04-12 00:48:32 +00:00
Nadav Rotem
6d5518d53d Fix a typo
llvm-svn: 178346
2013-03-29 16:34:23 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer
7097792a88 Split TargetLowering into a CodeGen and a SelectionDAG part.
This fixes some of the cycles between libCodeGen and libSelectionDAG. It's still
a complete mess but as long as the edges consist of virtual call it doesn't
cause breakage. BasicTTI did static calls and thus broke some build
configurations.

llvm-svn: 172246
2013-01-11 20:05:37 +00:00
Bill Wendling
e0920e4122 Remove the Function::getFnAttributes method in favor of using the AttributeSet
directly.

This is in preparation for removing the use of the 'Attribute' class as a
collection of attributes. That will shift to the AttributeSet class instead.

llvm-svn: 171253
2012-12-30 10:32:01 +00:00
Bill Wendling
56d9c4b832 Rename the 'Attributes' class to 'Attribute'. It's going to represent a single attribute in the future.
llvm-svn: 170502
2012-12-19 07:18:57 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
a490793037 Use the new script to sort the includes of every file under lib.
Sooooo many of these had incorrect or strange main module includes.
I have manually inspected all of these, and fixed the main module
include to be the nearest plausible thing I could find. If you own or
care about any of these source files, I encourage you to take some time
and check that these edits were sensible. I can't have broken anything
(I strictly added headers, and reordered them, never removed), but they
may not be the headers you'd really like to identify as containing the
API being implemented.

Many forward declarations and missing includes were added to a header
files to allow them to parse cleanly when included first. The main
module rule does in fact have its merits. =]

llvm-svn: 169131
2012-12-03 16:50:05 +00:00
Bill Wendling
b53357de39 Create enums for the different attributes.
We use the enums to query whether an Attributes object has that attribute. The
opaque layer is responsible for knowing where that specific attribute is stored.

llvm-svn: 165488
2012-10-09 07:45:08 +00:00
Bill Wendling
92f3ab845d Remove the `hasFnAttr' method from Function.
The hasFnAttr method has been replaced by querying the Attributes explicitly. No
intended functionality change.

llvm-svn: 164725
2012-09-26 21:48:26 +00:00
Duncan Sands
f1fad3ee2e Remove silly dead store. Patch by Ettl Martin.
llvm-svn: 163882
2012-09-14 09:00:11 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
49d4e3f282 Add a much more conservative strategy for aligning branch targets.
Previously, MBP essentially aligned every branch target it could. This
bloats code quite a bit, especially non-looping code which has no real
reason to prefer aligned branch targets so heavily.

As Andy said in review, it's still a bit odd to do this without a real
cost model, but this at least has much more plausible heuristics.

Fixes PR13265.

llvm-svn: 161409
2012-08-07 09:45:24 +00:00
Manman Ren
3769ac64a6 Reverse order of the two branches at end of a basic block if it is profitable.
We branch to the successor with higher edge weight first.
Convert from
     je    LBB4_8  --> to outer loop
     jmp   LBB4_14 --> to inner loop
to
     jne   LBB4_14
     jmp   LBB4_8

PR12750
rdar: 11393714

llvm-svn: 161018
2012-07-31 01:11:07 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
872747b0f0 Update a bunch of stale comments that dated from when this folled the
very first (and worst) placement algorithm. These should now more
accurately reflect the reality of the pass.

llvm-svn: 159185
2012-06-26 05:16:37 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer
bb30e1face Fix typos found by http://github.com/lyda/misspell-check
llvm-svn: 157885
2012-06-02 10:20:22 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
fbb6219d5b Add a somewhat hacky heuristic to do something different from whole-loop
rotation. When there is a loop backedge which is an unconditional
branch, we will end up with a branch somewhere no matter what. Try
placing this backedge in a fallthrough position above the loop header as
that will definitely remove at least one branch from the loop iteration,
where whole loop rotation may not.

I haven't seen any benchmarks where this is important but loop-blocks.ll
tests for it, and so this will be covered when I flip the default.

llvm-svn: 154812
2012-04-16 13:33:36 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
33b200ad13 Tweak the loop rotation logic to check whether the loop is naturally
laid out in a form with a fallthrough into the header and a fallthrough
out of the bottom. In that case, leave the loop alone because any
rotation will introduce unnecessary branches. If either side looks like
it will require an explicit branch, then the rotation won't add any, do
it to ensure the branch occurs outside of the loop (if possible) and
maximize the benefit of the fallthrough in the bottom.

llvm-svn: 154806
2012-04-16 09:31:23 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
fc5ab5d388 Rewrite how machine block placement handles loop rotation.
This is a complex change that resulted from a great deal of
experimentation with several different benchmarks. The one which proved
the most useful is included as a test case, but I don't know that it
captures all of the relevant changes, as I didn't have specific
regression tests for each, they were more the result of reasoning about
what the old algorithm would possibly do wrong. I'm also failing at the
moment to craft more targeted regression tests for these changes, if
anyone has ideas, it would be welcome.

The first big thing broken with the old algorithm is the idea that we
can take a basic block which has a loop-exiting successor and a looping
successor and use the looping successor as the layout top in order to
get that particular block to be the bottom of the loop after layout.
This happens to work in many cases, but not in all.

The second big thing broken was that we didn't try to select the exit
which fell into the nearest enclosing loop (to which we exit at all). As
a consequence, even if the rotation worked perfectly, it would result in
one of two bad layouts. Either the bottom of the loop would get
fallthrough, skipping across a nearer enclosing loop and thereby making
it discontiguous, or it would be forced to take an explicit jump over
the nearest enclosing loop to earch its successor. The point of the
rotation is to get fallthrough, so we need it to fallthrough to the
nearest loop it can.

The fix to the first issue is to actually layout the loop from the loop
header, and then rotate the loop such that the correct exiting edge can
be a fallthrough edge. This is actually much easier than I anticipated
because we can handle all the hard parts of finding a viable rotation
before we do the layout. We just store that, and then rotate after
layout is finished. No inner loops get split across the post-rotation
backedge because we check for them when selecting the rotation.

That fix exposed a latent problem with our exitting block selection --
we should allow the backedge to point into the middle of some inner-loop
chain as there is no real penalty to it, the whole point is that it
*won't* be a fallthrough edge. This may have blocked the rotation at all
in some cases, I have no idea and no test case as I've never seen it in
practice, it was just noticed by inspection.

Finally, all of these fixes, and studying the loops they produce,
highlighted another problem: in rotating loops like this, we sometimes
fail to align the destination of these backwards jumping edges. Fix this
by actually walking the backwards edges rather than relying on loopinfo.

This fixes regressions on heapsort if block placement is enabled as well
as lots of other cases where the previous logic would introduce an
abundance of unnecessary branches into the execution.

llvm-svn: 154783
2012-04-16 01:12:56 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
3c9796d9b0 Make a somewhat subtle change in the logic of block placement. Sometimes
the loop header has a non-loop predecessor which has been pre-fused into
its chain due to unanalyzable branches. In this case, rotating the
header into the body of the loop in order to place a loop exit at the
bottom of the loop is a Very Bad Idea as it makes the loop
non-contiguous.

I'm working on a good test case for this, but it's a bit annoynig to
craft. I should get one shortly, but I'm submitting this now so I can
begin the (lengthy) performance analysis process. An initial run of LNT
looks really, really good, but there is too much noise there for me to
trust it much.

llvm-svn: 154395
2012-04-10 13:35:57 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
5ec9b9fd94 Remove an over zealous assert. The assert was trying to catch places
where a chain outside of the loop block-set ended up in the worklist for
scheduling as part of the contiguous loop. However, asserting the first
block in the chain is in the loop-set isn't a valid check -- we may be
forced to drag a chain into the worklist due to one block in the chain
being part of the loop even though the first block is *not* in the loop.
This occurs when we have been forced to form a chain early due to
un-analyzable branches.

No test case here as I have no idea how to even begin reducing one, and
it will be hopelessly fragile. We have to somehow end up with a loop
header of an inner loop which is a successor of a basic block with an
unanalyzable pair of branch instructions. Ow. Self-host triggers it so
it is unlikely it will regress.

This at least gets block placement back to passing selfhost and the test
suite. There are still a lot of slowdown that I don't like coming out of
block placement, although there are now also a lot of speedups. =[ I'm
seeing swings in both directions up to 10%. I'm going to try to find
time to dig into this and see if we can turn this on for 3.1 as it does
a really good job of cleaning up after some loops that degraded with the
inliner changes.

llvm-svn: 154287
2012-04-08 14:37:02 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
2fe7a17703 Add a debug-only 'dump' method to the BlockChain structure to ease
debugging.

llvm-svn: 154286
2012-04-08 14:37:01 +00:00
Andrew Trick
b9d2e9e81d Codegen pass definition cleanup. No functionality.
Moving toward a uniform style of pass definition to allow easier target configuration.
Globally declare Pass ID.
Globally declare pass initializer.
Use INITIALIZE_PASS consistently.
Add a call to the initializer from CodeGen.cpp.
Remove redundant "createPass" functions and "getPassName" methods.

While cleaning up declarations, cleaned up comments (sorry for large diff).

llvm-svn: 150100
2012-02-08 21:23:13 +00:00
Jakub Staszak
4226104d8a Revert patch from 147090. There is not point to make code less readable if we
don't get any serious benefit there.

llvm-svn: 147101
2011-12-21 23:02:08 +00:00
Jakub Staszak
3a3ffa2d1e - Change a few operator[] to lookup which is cheaper.
- Add some constantness.

llvm-svn: 147090
2011-12-21 20:18:54 +00:00
Jakub Staszak
a8a18f2cf5 Remove unneeded semicolon.
Skip two looking up at BlockChain.

llvm-svn: 146053
2011-12-07 19:46:10 +00:00
Jakub Staszak
f1b60daf50 Remove unneeded type.
llvm-svn: 145995
2011-12-07 00:08:00 +00:00
Jakub Staszak
e4104abf3c - Remove unneeded #includes.
- Remove unused types/fields.
- Add some constantness.

llvm-svn: 145993
2011-12-06 23:59:33 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
9ab5855a19 Prevent rotating the blocks of a loop (and thus getting a backedge to be
fallthrough) in cases where we might fail to rotate an exit to an outer
loop onto the end of the loop chain.

Having *some* rotation, but not performing this rotation, is the primary
fix of thep performance regression with -enable-block-placement for
Olden/em3d (a whopping 30% regression). Still working on reducing the
test case that actually exercises this and the new rotation strategy out
of this code, but I want to check if this regresses other test cases
first as that may indicate it isn't the correct fix.

llvm-svn: 145195
2011-11-27 20:18:00 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
bb4c250613 Take two on rotating the block ordering of loops. My previous attempt
was centered around the premise of laying out a loop in a chain, and
then rotating that chain. This is good for preserving contiguous layout,
but bad for actually making sane rotations. In order to keep it safe,
I had to essentially make it impossible to rotate deeply nested loops.
The information needed to correctly reason about a deeply nested loop is
actually available -- *before* we layout the loop. We know the inner
loops are already fused into chains, etc. We lose information the moment
we actually lay out the loop.

The solution was the other alternative for this algorithm I discussed
with Benjamin and some others: rather than rotating the loop
after-the-fact, try to pick a profitable starting block for the loop's
layout, and then use our existing layout logic. I was worried about the
complexity of this "pick" step, but it turns out such complexity is
needed to handle all the important cases I keep teasing out of benchmarks.

This is, I'm afraid, a bit of a work-in-progress. It is still
misbehaving on some likely important cases I'm investigating in Olden.
It also isn't really tested. I'm going to try to craft some interesting
nested-loop test cases, but it's likely to be extremely time consuming
and I don't want to go there until I'm sure I'm testing the correct
behavior. Sadly I can't come up with a way of getting simple, fine
grained test cases for this logic. We need complex loop structures to
even trigger much of it.

llvm-svn: 145183
2011-11-27 13:34:33 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
c4043847df Fix an impressive type-o / spell-o Duncan noticed.
llvm-svn: 145181
2011-11-27 10:32:16 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
e6374e6953 Rework a bit of the implementation of loop block rotation to not rely so
heavily on AnalyzeBranch. That routine doesn't behave as we want given
that rotation occurs mid-way through re-ordering the function. Instead
merely check that there are not unanalyzable branching constructs
present, and then reason about the CFG via successor lists. This
actually simplifies my mental model for all of this as well.

The concrete result is that we now will rotate more loop chains. I've
added a test case from Olden highlighting the effect. There is still
a bit more to do here though in order to regain all of the performance
in Olden.

llvm-svn: 145179
2011-11-27 09:22:53 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
0d073febb6 Introduce a loop block rotation optimization to the new block placement
pass. This is designed to achieve one of the important optimizations
that the old code placement pass did, but more simply.

This is a somewhat rough and *very* conservative version of the
transform. We could get a lot fancier here if there are profitable cases
to do so. In particular, this only looks for a single pattern, it
insists that the loop backedge being rotated away is the last backedge
in the chain, and it doesn't provide any means of doing better in-loop
placement due to the rotation. However, it appears that it will handle
the important loops I am finding in the LLVM test suite.

llvm-svn: 145158
2011-11-27 00:38:03 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
f6e96b54f8 Fix a silly use-after-free issue. A much earlier version of this code
need lots of fanciness around retaining a reference to a Chain's slot in
the BlockToChain map, but that's all gone now. We can just go directly
to allocating the new chain (which will update the mapping for us) and
using it.

Somewhat gross mechanically generated test case replicates the issue
Duncan spotted when actually testing this out.

llvm-svn: 145120
2011-11-24 11:23:15 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
1d3f68ffd0 When adding blocks to the list of those which no longer have any CFG
conflicts, we should only be adding the first block of the chain to the
list, lest we try to merge into the middle of that chain. Most of the
places we were doing this we already happened to be looking at the first
block, but there is no reason to assume that, and in some cases it was
clearly wrong.

I've added a couple of tests here. One already worked, but I like having
an explicit test for it. The other is reduced from a test case Duncan
reduced for me and used to crash. Now it is handled correctly.

llvm-svn: 145119
2011-11-24 08:46:04 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
dcf04fc35a Relax an invariant that block placement was trying to assert a bit
further. This invariant just wasn't going to work in the face of
unanalyzable branches; we need to be resillient to the phenomenon of
chains poking into a loop and poking out of a loop. In fact, we already
were, we just needed to not assert on it.

This was found during a bootstrap with block placement turned on.

llvm-svn: 145100
2011-11-23 10:35:36 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
a357b0a5ee Fix a crash in block placement due to an inner loop that happened to be
reversed in the function's original ordering, and we happened to
encounter it while handling an outer unnatural CFG structure.

Thanks to the test case reduced from GCC's source by Benjamin Kramer.
This may also fix a crasher in gzip that Duncan reduced for me, but
I haven't yet gotten to testing that one.

llvm-svn: 145094
2011-11-23 03:03:21 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
aac8e5082a The logic for breaking the CFG in the presence of hot successors didn't
properly account for the *global* probability of the edge being taken.
This manifested as a very large number of unconditional branches to
blocks being merged against the CFG even though they weren't
particularly hot within the CFG.

The fix is to check whether the edge being merged is both locally hot
relative to other successors for the source block, and globally hot
compared to other (unmerged) predecessors of the destination block.

This introduces a new crasher on GCC single-source, but it's currently
behind a flag, and Ben has offered to work on the reduction. =]

llvm-svn: 145010
2011-11-20 11:22:06 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
f24d3f8fc7 Move the handling of unanalyzable branches out of the loop-driven chain
formation phase and into the initial walk of the basic blocks. We
essentially pre-merge all blocks where unanalyzable fallthrough exists,
as we won't be able to update the terminators effectively after any
reorderings. This is quite a bit more principled as there may be CFGs
where the second half of the unanalyzable pair has some analyzable
predecessor that gets placed first. Then it may get placed next,
implicitly breaking the unanalyzable branch even though we never even
looked at the part that isn't analyzable. I've included a test case that
triggers this (thanks Benjamin yet again!), and I'm hoping to synthesize
some more general ones as I dig into related issues.

Also, to make this new scheme work we have to be able to handle branches
into the middle of a chain, so add this check. We always fallback on the
incoming ordering.

Finally, this starts to really underscore a known limitation of the
current implementation -- we don't consider broken predecessors when
merging successors. This can caused major missed opportunities, and is
something I'm planning on looking at next (modulo more bug reports).

llvm-svn: 144994
2011-11-19 10:26:02 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
fdcba17bec Rather than trying to use the loop block sequence *or* the function
block sequence when recovering from unanalyzable control flow
constructs, *always* use the function sequence. I'm not sure why I ever
went down the path of trying to use the loop sequence, it is
fundamentally not the correct sequence to use. We're trying to preserve
the incoming layout in the cases of unreasonable control flow, and that
is only encoded at the function level. We already have a filter to
select *exactly* the sub-set of blocks within the function that we're
trying to form into a chain.

The resulting code layout is also significantly better because of this.
In several places we were ending up with completely unreasonable control
flow constructs due to the ordering chosen by the loop structure for its
internal storage. This change removes a completely wasteful vector of
basic blocks, saving memory allocation in the common case even though it
costs us CPU in the fairly rare case of unnatural loops. Finally, it
fixes the latest crasher reduced out of GCC's single source. Thanks
again to Benjamin Kramer for the reduction, my bugpoint skills failed at
it.

llvm-svn: 144627
2011-11-15 06:26:43 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
9e6d173b9e It helps to deallocate memory as well as allocate it. =] This actually
cleans up all the chains allocated during the processing of each
function so that for very large inputs we don't just grow memory usage
without bound.

llvm-svn: 144533
2011-11-14 10:57:23 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
06afac4924 Remove an over-eager assert that was firing on one of the ARM regression
tests when I forcibly enabled block placement.

It is apparantly possible for an unanalyzable block to fallthrough to
a non-loop block. I don't actually beleive this is correct, I believe
that 'canFallThrough' is returning true needlessly for the code
construct, and I've left a bit of a FIXME on the verification code to
try to track down why this is coming up.

Anyways, removing the assert doesn't degrade the correctness of the algorithm.

llvm-svn: 144532
2011-11-14 10:55:53 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
a1475d9b6b Begin chipping away at one of the biggest quadratic-ish behaviors in
this pass. We're leaving already merged blocks on the worklist, and
scanning them again and again only to determine each time through that
indeed they aren't viable. We can instead remove them once we're going
to have to scan the worklist. This is the easy way to implement removing
them. If this remains on the profile (as I somewhat suspect it will), we
can get a lot more clever here, as the worklist's order is essentially
irrelevant. We can use swapping and fold the two loops to reduce
overhead even when there are many blocks on the worklist but only a few
of them are removed.

llvm-svn: 144531
2011-11-14 09:46:33 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
f89087744e Under the hood, MBPI is doing a linear scan of every successor every
time it is queried to compute the probability of a single successor.
This makes computing the probability of every successor of a block in
sequence... really really slow. ;] This switches to a linear walk of the
successors rather than a quadratic one. One of several quadratic
behaviors slowing this pass down.

I'm not really thrilled with moving the sum code into the public
interface of MBPI, but I don't (at the moment) have ideas for a better
interface. My direction I'm thinking in for a better interface is to
have MBPI actually retain much more state and make *all* of these
queries cheap. That's a lot of work, and would require invasive changes.
Until then, this seems like the least bad (ie, least quadratic)
solution. Suggestions welcome.

llvm-svn: 144530
2011-11-14 09:12:57 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
b7f21af176 Teach machine block placement to cope with unnatural loops. These don't
get loop info structures associated with them, and so we need some way
to make forward progress selecting and placing basic blocks. The
technique used here is pretty brutal -- it just scans the list of blocks
looking for the first unplaced candidate. It keeps placing blocks like
this until the CFG becomes tractable.

The cost is somewhat unfortunate, it requires allocating a vector of all
basic block pointers eagerly. I have some ideas about how to simplify
and optimize this, but I'm trying to get the logic correct first.

Thanks to Benjamin Kramer for the reduced test case out of GCC. Sadly
there are other bugs that GCC is tickling that I'm reducing and working
on now.

llvm-svn: 144516
2011-11-14 00:00:35 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
1d9335bbb2 Cleanup some 80-columns violations and poor formatting. These snuck by
when I was reading through the code for style.

llvm-svn: 144513
2011-11-13 22:50:09 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
7e39d0c643 Enhance the assertion mechanisms in place to make it easier to catch
when we fail to place all the blocks of a loop. Currently this is
happening for unnatural loops, and this logic helps more immediately
point to the problem.

llvm-svn: 144504
2011-11-13 21:39:51 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
bbc3bddb16 Teach MBP to force-merge layout successors for blocks with unanalyzable
branches that also may involve fallthrough. In the case of blocks with
no fallthrough, we can still re-order the blocks profitably. For example
instruction decoding will in some cases continue past an indirect jump,
making laying out its most likely successor there profitable.

Note, no test case. I don't know how to write a test case that exercises
this logic, but it matches the described desired semantics in
discussions with Jakob and others. If anyone has a nice example of IR
that will trigger this, that would be lovely.

Also note, there are still assertion failures in real world code with
this. I'm digging into those next, now that I know this isn't the cause.

llvm-svn: 144499
2011-11-13 12:17:28 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
07f8871a86 Hoist another gross nested loop into a helper method.
llvm-svn: 144498
2011-11-13 11:42:26 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
e85aeac703 Add a missing doxygen comment for a helper method.
llvm-svn: 144497
2011-11-13 11:34:55 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
535c0683ea Hoist a nested loop into its own method.
llvm-svn: 144496
2011-11-13 11:34:53 +00:00