Adds some tests to check the formatting of the dot
file produced when using -dot-ddg.
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93949
Summary:
This is the last functional patch affecting the representation of DDG.
Here we try to simplify the DDG to reduce the number of nodes and edges by
iteratively merging pairs of nodes that satisfy the following conditions,
until no such pair can be identified. A pair of nodes consisting of a and b
can be merged if:
1. the only edge from a is a def-use edge to b and
2. the only edge to b is a def-use edge from a and
3. there is no cyclic edge from b to a and
4. all instructions in a and b belong to the same basic block and
5. both a and b are simple (single or multi instruction) nodes.
These criteria allow us to fold many uninteresting def-use edges that
commonly exist in the graph while avoiding the risk of introducing
dependencies that didn't exist before.
Authored By: bmahjour
Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto, ppc-slack
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72350
Summary:
This patch associates ordinal numbers to the DDG Nodes allowing
the builder to order nodes within a pi-block in program order. The
algorithm works by simply assuming the order in which the BBList
is fed into the builder. The builder already relies on the blocks being
in program order so that it can compute the dependencies correctly.
Similarly the order of instructions in their parent basic blocks
determine their program order.
Authored By: bmahjour
Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto, ppc-slack
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70986
Summary:
This fixes the memory leak in bec37c3fc766a7b97f8c52c181c325fd47b75259
and re-delivers the reverted patch.
In this patch the DDG DAG is sorted topologically to put the
nodes in the graph in the order that would satisfy all
dependencies. This helps transformations that would like to
generate code based on the DDG. Since the DDG is a DAG a
reverse-post-order traversal would give us the topological
ordering. This patch also sorts the basic blocks passed to
the builder based on program order to ensure that the
dependencies are computed in the correct direction.
Authored By: bmahjour
Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto, ppc-slack
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70609
Summary:
In this patch the DDG DAG is sorted topologically to put the
nodes in the graph in the order that would satisfy all
dependencies. This helps transformations that would like to
generate code based on the DDG. Since the DDG is a DAG a
reverse-post-order traversal would give us the topological
ordering. This patch also sorts the basic blocks passed to
the builder based on program order to ensure that the
dependencies are computed in the correct direction.
Authored By: bmahjour
Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto, ppc-slack
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70609
Summary:
This patch adds Pi Blocks to the DDG. A pi-block represents a group of DDG
nodes that are part of a strongly-connected component of the graph.
Replacing all the SCCs with pi-blocks results in an acyclic representation
of the DDG. For example if we have:
{a -> b}, {b -> c, d}, {c -> a}
the cycle a -> b -> c -> a is abstracted into a pi-block "p" as follows:
{p -> d} with "p" containing: {a -> b}, {b -> c}, {c -> a}
In this implementation the edges between nodes that are part of the pi-block
are preserved. The crossing edges (edges where one end of the edge is in the
set of nodes belonging to an SCC and the other end is outside that set) are
replaced with corresponding edges to/from the pi-block node instead.
Authored By: bmahjour
Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto, ppc-slack
Tag: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68827
Summary:
This patch adds Root Node to the DDG. The purpose of the root node is to create a single entry node that allows graph walk iterators to iterate through all nodes of the graph, making sure that no node is left unvisited during a graph walk (eg. SCC or DFS). Once the DDG is fully constructed it will have exactly one root node. Every node in the graph is reachable from the root. The algorithm for connecting the root node is based on depth-first-search that keeps track of visited nodes to try to avoid creating unnecessary edges.
Authored By: bmahjour
Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto, ppc-slack
Tag: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67970
llvm-svn: 373386
Summary:
This is the first patch in a series of patches that will implement data dependence graph in LLVM. Many of the ideas used in this implementation are based on the following paper:
D. J. Kuck, R. H. Kuhn, D. A. Padua, B. Leasure, and M. Wolfe (1981). DEPENDENCE GRAPHS AND COMPILER OPTIMIZATIONS.
This patch contains support for a basic DDGs containing only atomic nodes (one node for each instruction). The edges are two fold: def-use edges and memory-dependence edges.
The implementation takes a list of basic-blocks and only considers dependencies among instructions in those basic blocks. Any dependencies coming into or going out of instructions that do not belong to those basic blocks are ignored.
The algorithm for building the graph involves the following steps in order:
1. For each instruction in the range of basic blocks to consider, create an atomic node in the resulting graph.
2. For each node in the graph establish def-use edges to/from other nodes in the graph.
3. For each pair of nodes containing memory instruction(s) create memory edges between them. This part of the algorithm goes through the instructions in lexicographical order and creates edges in reverse order if the sink of the dependence occurs before the source of it.
Authored By: bmahjour
Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert
Reviewed By: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu
Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto
Tag: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65350
llvm-svn: 372238
Summary:
This is the first patch in a series of patches that will implement data dependence graph in LLVM. Many of the ideas used in this implementation are based on the following paper:
D. J. Kuck, R. H. Kuhn, D. A. Padua, B. Leasure, and M. Wolfe (1981). DEPENDENCE GRAPHS AND COMPILER OPTIMIZATIONS.
This patch contains support for a basic DDGs containing only atomic nodes (one node for each instruction). The edges are two fold: def-use edges and memory-dependence edges.
The implementation takes a list of basic-blocks and only considers dependencies among instructions in those basic blocks. Any dependencies coming into or going out of instructions that do not belong to those basic blocks are ignored.
The algorithm for building the graph involves the following steps in order:
1. For each instruction in the range of basic blocks to consider, create an atomic node in the resulting graph.
2. For each node in the graph establish def-use edges to/from other nodes in the graph.
3. For each pair of nodes containing memory instruction(s) create memory edges between them. This part of the algorithm goes through the instructions in lexicographical order and creates edges in reverse order if the sink of the dependence occurs before the source of it.
Authored By: bmahjour
Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert
Reviewed By: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu
Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto
Tag: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65350
llvm-svn: 372162