This patch moves checking the threshold of runtime pointer checks to the vectorization requirements (late diagnostics) and emits a diagnostic that infroms the user the loop would be vectorized if not for exceeding the pointer-check threshold. Clang will also append the options that can be used to allow vectorization.
llvm-svn: 244523
As discussed in D11760, this patch moves the (V)PSRA(WD) arithmetic shift-by-constant folding to InstCombine to match the logical shift implementations.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11886
llvm-svn: 244495
This patch moves the verification of fast-math to just before vectorization is done. This way we can tell clang to append the command line options would that allow floating-point commutativity. Specifically those are enableing fast-math or specifying a loop hint.
llvm-svn: 244489
Sometimes interleaving is not beneficial, as determined by the cost-model and sometimes it is disabled by a loop hint (by the user). This patch modifies the diagnostic messages to make it clear why interleaving wasn't done.
llvm-svn: 244485
This change adds the unroll metadata "llvm.loop.unroll.enable" which directs
the optimizer to unroll a loop fully if the trip count is known at compile time, and
unroll partially if the trip count is not known at compile time. This differs from
"llvm.loop.unroll.full" which explicitly does not unroll a loop if the trip count is not
known at compile time.
The "llvm.loop.unroll.enable" is intended to be added for loops annotated with
"#pragma unroll".
llvm-svn: 244466
Summary:
This adds a hook to TTI which enables us to selectively turn on by default
interleaved access vectorization for targets on which we have have performed
the required benchmarking.
Reviewers: rengolin
Subscribers: rengolin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11901
llvm-svn: 244449
The scalarizer can cache incorrect entries when walking up a chain of
insertelement instructions. This occurs when it encounters more than one
instruction that it is not actively searching for, as it unconditionally caches
every element it finds. The fix is to only cache the first element that it
isn't searching for so we don't overwrite correct entries.
Reviewers: hfinkel
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11559
llvm-svn: 244448
This is the full set of checks that clients can further filter. IOW,
it's client-agnostic. This makes LAA complete in the sense that it now
provides the two main results of its analysis precomputed:
1. memory dependences via getDepChecker().getInsterestingDependences()
2. run-time checks via getRuntimePointerCheck().getChecks()
However, as a consequence we now compute this information pro-actively.
Thus if the client decides to skip the loop based on the dependences
we've computed the checks unnecessarily. In order to see whether this
was a significant overhead I checked compile time on SPEC2k6 LTO bitcode
files. The change was in the noise.
The checks are generated in canCheckPtrAtRT, at the same place where we
used to call groupChecks to merge checks.
llvm-svn: 244368
Summary: llvm::ConstantFoldTerminator function can convert SwitchInst with single case (and default) to a conditional BranchInst. This patch adds support to preserve make.implicit metadata on this conversion.
Reviewers: sanjoy, weimingz, chenli
Subscribers: mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11841
llvm-svn: 244348
This patch fixes the sse2/avx2 vector shift by constant instcombine call to correctly deal with the fact that the shift amount is formed from the entire lower 64-bit and not just the lowest element as it currently assumes.
e.g.
%1 = tail call <4 x i32> @llvm.x86.sse2.psrl.d(<4 x i32> %v, <4 x i32> <i32 15, i32 15, i32 15, i32 15>)
In this case, (V)PSRLD doesn't perform a lshr by 15 but in fact attempts to shift by 64424509455 ((15 << 32) | 15) - giving a zero result.
In addition, this review also recognizes shift-by-zero from a ConstantAggregateZero type (PR23821).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11760
llvm-svn: 244341
As a follow-up to r244181, resolve uniquing cycles underneath distinct
nodes on the fly. This prevents uniquing cycles in early operands from
affecting later operands. It also removes an iteration through distinct
nodes' operands.
No real functional change here, just more prompt resolution of temporary
nodes.
llvm-svn: 244302
After r244074, we now have a successors() method to iterate over
all the successors of a TerminatorInst. This commit changes a bunch
of eligible loops to use it.
llvm-svn: 244260
iisUnmovableInstruction() had a list of instructions hardcoded which are
considered unmovable. The list lacked (at least) an entry for the va_arg
and cmpxchg instructions.
Fix this by introducing a new Instruction::mayBeMemoryDependent()
instead of maintaining another instruction list.
Patch by Matthias Braun <matze@braunis.de>.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11577
rdar://problem/22118647
llvm-svn: 244244
This is the first mechanical step in preparation for making this and all
the other alias analysis passes available to the new pass manager. I'm
factoring out all the totally boring changes I can so I'm moving code
around here with no other changes. I've even minimized the formatting
churn.
I'll reformat and freshen comments on the interface now that its located
in the right place so that the substantive changes don't triger this.
llvm-svn: 244197
around a DataLayout interface in favor of directly querying DataLayout.
This wrapper specifically helped handle the case where this no
DataLayout, but LLVM now requires it simplifynig all of this. I've
updated callers to directly query DataLayout. This in turn exposed
a bunch of places where we should have DataLayout readily available but
don't which I've fixed. This then in turn exposed that we were passing
DataLayout around in a bunch of arguments rather than making it readily
available so I've also fixed that.
No functionality changed.
llvm-svn: 244189
Rotate the algorithm for remapping distinct nodes in order to simplify
how uniquing cycles get resolved. This removes some of the recursion,
and, most importantly, exposes all uniquing cycles at the top-level.
Besides being a little more efficient -- temporary MDNodes won't live as
long -- the clearer logic should help protect against bugs like those
fixed in r243961 and r243976.
What are uniquing cycles? Why do they present challenges when remapping
metadata?
!0 = !{!1}
!1 = !{!0}
!0 and !1 form a simple uniquing cycle. When remapping from one
metadata graph to another, every uniquing cycle gets "duplicated"
through a dance:
!0-temp = !{!1?} ; map(!0): clone !0, VM[!0] = !0-temp
!1-temp = !{!0?} ; ..map(!1): clone !1, VM[!1] = !1-temp
!1-temp = !{!0-temp} ; ..map(!1): remap !1's operands
!2 = !{!0-temp} ; ..map(!1): uniquify: !1-temp => !2
!0-temp = !{!2} ; map(!0): remap !0's operands
!3 = !{!2} ; map(!0): uniquify: !0-temp => !3
; Result
!2 = !{!3}
!3 = !{!2}
(In the two "uniquify" steps above, the operands of !X-temp are compared
to the operands of !X. If they're the same, then !X-temp gets RAUW'ed
to !X; if they're different, then !X-temp is promoted to a new unique
node. The latter case always hits in for uniquing cycles, so we
duplicate all the nodes involved.)
Why is this a problem? Uniquable Metadata nodes that have temporary
node as transitive operands keep RAUW support until the temporary nodes
get finalized. With non-cycles, this happens automatically: when a
uniquable node's count of unresolved operands drops to zero, it
immediately sheds its own RAUW support (possibly triggering the same in
any node that references it). However, uniquing cycles create a
reference cycle, and uniqued nodes that transitively reference a
uniquing cycle are "stuck" in an unresolved state until someone calls
`MDNode::resolveCycles()` on a node in the unresolved subgraph.
Distinct nodes should help here (and mostly do): since they aren't
uniqued anywhere, they are guaranteed not to be RAUW'ed. They
effectively form a barrier between uniqued nodes, breaking some uniquing
cycles, and shielding uniqued nodes from uniquing cycles.
Unfortunately, with this barrier in place, the unresolved subgraph(s)
can be disjoint from the top-level node. The mapping algorithm needs to
find at least one representative from each disjoint subgraph. But which
nodes are *stuck*, and which will get resolved automatically? And which
nodes are in the unresolved subgraph? The old logic was conservative.
This commit rotates the logic for distinct nodes, so that we have access
to unresolved nodes at the top-level call to `llvm::MapMetadata()`.
Each time we return to the top-level, we know that all temporaries have
been RAUW'ed away. Here, it's safe (and necessary) to call
`resolveCycles()` immediately on unresolved operands.
This should also perform better than the old algorithm. The recursion
stack is shorter, temporary nodes don't live as long, and there are
fewer tracking references to unresolved nodes. As the debug info graph
introduces more 'distinct' nodes, remapping should incrementally get
cheaper and cheaper.
Aside from possible performance improvements (and reduced cruft in the
`LLVMContext`), there should be no functionality change here.
llvm-svn: 244181
Rename `remap()` to `remapOperands()`, and restrict its contract to
remapping operands. Previously, it also called `mapToMetadata()`, but
this logic is hard to reason about externally. In particular, this
refactors `mapUniquedNode()` to avoid redundant mapping calls, taking
advantage of the RAUWs that are already in place.
llvm-svn: 244168
The only place that tries to return a CallGraph by value
(CallGraphAnalysis::run) doesn't seem to be used right now, but it's a
reasonable bit of cleanup anyway.
llvm-svn: 244122
Create wrapper methods in the Function class for the OptimizeForSize and MinSize
attributes. We want to hide the logic of "or'ing" them together when optimizing
just for size (-Os).
Currently, we are not consistent about this and rely on a front-end to always set
OptimizeForSize (-Os) if MinSize (-Oz) is on. Thus, there are 18 FIXME changes here
that should be added as follow-on patches with regression tests.
This patch is NFC-intended: it just replaces existing direct accesses of the attributes
by the equivalent wrapper call.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11734
llvm-svn: 243994
r243883 and r243961 made a use-after-free far more likely:
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/sanitizer-x86_64-linux-fast/builds/6041/steps/check-llvm%20asan/logs/stdio
Unresolved nodes get inserted into the `Cycles` array. If they later
get resolved through RAUW, we need to update the reference. It's
interesting that this never hit before (maybe an asan-ified clang
bootstrap with `-flto -g` would have hit it, but I admit I haven't tried
anything quite that crazy).
llvm-svn: 243976
This change was done as an audit and is by inspection. The new EH
system is still very much a work in progress. NFC for the landingpad
case.
llvm-svn: 243965
r243883 started moving 'distinct' nodes instead of duplicated them in
lib/Linker. This had the side-effect of sometimes not cloning uniqued
nodes that reference them. I missed a corner case:
!named = !{!0}
!0 = !{!1}
!1 = distinct !{!0}
!0 is the entry point for "remapping", and a temporary clone (say,
!0-temp) is created and mapped in case we need to model a uniquing
cycle.
Recursive descent into !1. !1 is distinct, so we leave it alone,
but update its operand to !0-temp.
Pop back out to !0. Its only operand, !1, hasn't changed, so we don't
need to use !0-temp. !0-temp goes out of scope, and we're finished
remapping, but we're left with:
!named = !{!0}
!0 = !{!1}
!1 = distinct !{null} ; uh oh...
Previously, if !0 and !0-temp ended up with identical operands, then
!0-temp couldn't have been referenced at all. Now that distinct nodes
don't get duplicated, that assumption is invalid. We need to
!0-temp->replaceAllUsesWith(!0) before freeing !0-temp.
I found this while running an internal `-flto -g` bootstrap. Strangely,
there was no case of this in the open source bootstrap I'd done before
commit...
llvm-svn: 243961
through PHI nodes across iterations.
This patch teaches the new advanced loop unrolling heuristics to propagate
constants into the loop from the preheader and around the backedge after
simulating each iteration. This lets us brute force solve simple recurrances
that aren't modeled effectively by SCEV. It also makes it more clear why we
need to process the loop in-order rather than bottom-up which might otherwise
make much more sense (for example, for DCE).
This came out of an attempt I'm making to develop a principled way to account
for dead code in the unroll estimation. When I implemented
a forward-propagating version of that it produced incorrect results due to
failing to propagate *cost* between loop iterations through the PHI nodes, and
it occured to me we really should at least propagate simplifications across
those edges, and it is quite easy thanks to the loop being in canonical and
LCSSA form.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11706
llvm-svn: 243900
Instead of cloning distinct `MDNode`s when linking in a module, just
move them over. The module linker destroys the source module, so the
old node would otherwise just be leaked on the context. Create the new
node in place. This also reduces the number of cloned uniqued nodes
(since it's less likely their operands have changed).
This mapping strategy is only correct when we're discarding the source,
so the linker turns it on via a ValueMapper flag, `RF_MoveDistinctMDs`.
There's nothing observable in terms of `llvm-link` output here: the
linked module should be semantically identical.
I'll be adding more 'distinct' nodes to the debug info metadata graph in
order to break uniquing cycles, so the benefits of this will partly come
in future commits. However, we should get some gains immediately, since
we have a fair number of 'distinct' `DILocation`s being linked in.
llvm-svn: 243883
This is a minor optimization to only check for unresolved operands
inside `mapDistinctNode()` if the operands have actually changed. This
shouldn't really cause any change in behaviour. I didn't actually see a
slowdown in a profile, I was just poking around nearby and saw the
opportunity.
llvm-svn: 243866
This introduces new instructions neccessary to implement MSVC-compatible
exception handling support. Most of the middle-end and none of the
back-end haven't been audited or updated to take them into account.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11097
llvm-svn: 243766
The patch changes the SLPVectorizer::vectorizeStores to choose the immediate
succeeding or preceding candidate for a store instruction when it has multiple
consecutive candidates. In this way it has better chance to find more slp
vectorization opportunities.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10445
llvm-svn: 243666
The reason I was passing this vector by value in the constructor so that
I wouldn't have to copy when initializing the corresponding member but
then I forgot the std::move.
The use-case is LoopDistribution which filters the checks then
std::moves it to LoopVersioning's constructor. With this interface we
can avoid any copies.
llvm-svn: 243616
Before, we were passing the pointer partitions to LAA. Now, we get all
the checks from LAA and filter out the checks within partitions in
LoopDistribution.
This effectively concludes the steps to move filtering memchecks from
LAA into its clients. There is still some cleanup left to remove the
unused interfaces in LAA that still take PtrPartition.
(Moving this functionality to LoopDistribution also requires
needsChecking on pointers to be made public.)
llvm-svn: 243613
Bonus change to remove emacs major mode marker from SystemZMachineFunctionInfo.cpp because emacs already knows it's C++ from the extension. Also fix typo "appeary" in AMDGPUMCAsmInfo.h.
llvm-svn: 243585
Summary:
returns_twice (most importantly, setjmp) functions are
optimization-hostile: if local variable is promoted to register, and is
changed between setjmp() and longjmp() calls, this update will be
undone. This is the reason why "man setjmp" advises to mark all these
locals as "volatile".
This can not be enough for ASan, though: when it replaces static alloca
with dynamic one, optionally called if UAR mode is enabled, it adds a
whole lot of SSA values, and computations of local variable addresses,
that can involve virtual registers, and cause unexpected behavior, when
these registers are restored from buffer saved in setjmp.
To fix this, just disable dynamic alloca and UAR tricks whenever we see
a returns_twice call in the function.
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: llvm-commits, kcc
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11495
llvm-svn: 243561
ASan shadow on Android starts at address 0 for both historic and
performance reasons. This is possible because the platform mandates
-pie, which makes lower memory region always available.
This is not such a good idea on 64-bit platforms because of MAP_32BIT
incompatibility.
This patch changes Android/AArch64 mapping to be the same as that of
Linux/AAarch64.
llvm-svn: 243548
Summary:
As added initially, statepoints required their call targets to be a
constant pointer null if ``numPatchBytes`` was non-zero. This turns out
to be a problem ergonomically, since there is no way to mark patchable
statepoints as calling a (readable) symbolic value.
This change remove the restriction of requiring ``null`` call targets
for patchable statepoints, and changes PlaceSafepoints to maintain the
symbolic call target through its transformation.
Reviewers: reames, swaroop.sridhar
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11550
llvm-svn: 243502
Before the patch, the checks were generated internally in
addRuntimeCheck. Now, we use the new overloaded version of
addRuntimeCheck that takes the ready-made set of checks as a parameter.
The checks are now generated by the client (LoopDistribution) with the
new RuntimePointerChecking::generateChecks API.
Also the new printChecks API is used to print out the checks for
debugging.
This is to continue the transition over to the new model whereby clients
will get the full set of checks from LAA, filter it and then pass it to
LoopVersioning and in turn to addRuntimeCheck.
llvm-svn: 243382
Summary:
If a scale or a base register can be rewritten as "Zext({A,+,1})" then
LSR will now consider a formula of that form in its normal cost
computation.
Depends on D9180
Reviewers: qcolombet, atrick
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9181
llvm-svn: 243348
Summary:
Was D9784: "Remove loop variant range check when induction variable is
strictly increasing"
This change re-implements D9784 with the two differences:
1. It does not use SCEVExpander and does not generate new
instructions. Instead, it does a quick local search for existing
`llvm::Value`s that it needs when modifying the `icmp`
instruction.
2. It is more general -- it deals with both increasing and decreasing
induction variables.
I've added all of the tests included with D9784, and two more.
As an example on what this change does (copied from D9784):
Given C code:
```
for (int i = M; i < N; i++) // i is known not to overflow
if (i < 0) break;
a[i] = 0;
}
```
This transformation produces:
```
for (int i = M; i < N; i++)
if (M < 0) break;
a[i] = 0;
}
```
Which can be unswitched into:
```
if (!(M < 0))
for (int i = M; i < N; i++)
a[i] = 0;
}
```
I went back and forth on whether the top level logic should live in
`SimplifyIndvar::eliminateIVComparison` or be put into its own
routine. Right now I've put it under `eliminateIVComparison` because
even though the `icmp` is not *eliminated*, it no longer is an IV
comparison. I'm open to putting it in its own helper routine if you
think that is better.
Reviewers: reames, nicholas, atrick
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11278
llvm-svn: 243331
Now that we are generating sane codegen for vector sext/zext nodes on SSE targets, this patch uses instcombine to replace the SSE41/AVX2 pmovsx and pmovzx intrinsics with the equivalent native IR code.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11503
llvm-svn: 243303
This reverts commit r243167.
Duncan pointed out that dyn_cast can return null in these cases, so this
was an unsafe commit to make. Sorry for the noise.
Worryingly there were no tests which fail...
llvm-svn: 243302
r243250 appeared to break clang/test/Analysis/dead-store.c on one of the build
slaves, but I couldn't reproduce this failure locally. Probably a false
positive as I saw this test was broken by r243246 or r243247 too but passed
later without people fixing anything.
llvm-svn: 243253
Summary:
This patch updates TargetTransformInfoImplCRTPBase::getGEPCost to consider
addressing modes. It now returns TCC_Free when the GEP can be completely folded
to an addresing mode.
I started this patch as I refactored SLSR. Function isGEPFoldable looks common
and is indeed used by some WIP of mine. So I extracted that logic to getGEPCost.
Furthermore, I noticed getGEPCost wasn't directly tested anywhere. The best
testing bed seems CostModel, but its getInstructionCost method invokes
getAddressComputationCost for GEPs which provides very coarse estimation. So
this patch also makes getInstructionCost call the updated getGEPCost for GEPs.
This change inevitably breaks some tests because the cost model changes, but
nothing looks seriously wrong -- if we believe the new cost model is the right
way to go, these tests should be updated.
This patch is not perfect yet -- the comments in some tests need to be updated.
I want to know whether this is a right approach before fixing those details.
Reviewers: chandlerc, hfinkel
Subscribers: aschwaighofer, llvm-commits, aemerson
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9819
llvm-svn: 243250
Summary:
This patch improves trivial loop unswitch.
The current trivial loop unswitch only checks if loop header's terminator contains a trivial unswitch condition. But if the loop header only has one reachable successor (due to intentionally or unintentionally missed code simplification), we should consider the successor as part of the loop header. Therefore, instead of stopping at loop header's terminator, we should keep traversing its successors within loop until reach a *real* conditional branch or switch (whose condition can not be constant folded). This change will enable a single -loop-unswitch pass to unswitch multiple trivial conditions (unswitch one trivial condition could open opportunity to unswitch another one in the same loop), while the old implementation can unswitch only one per pass.
Reviewers: reames, broune
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11481
llvm-svn: 243203
This patch extend LoopReroll pass to hand the loops which
is similar to the following:
while (len > 1) {
sum4 += buf[len];
sum4 += buf[len-1];
len -= 2;
}
llvm-svn: 243171
Since both places which set this variable do so with dyn_cast, and not
dyn_cast_or_null, its impossible to get a nullptr here, so we can remove
the check.
llvm-svn: 243167
Instead of the pattern
for (auto I = x.rbegin(), E = x.end(); I != E; ++I)
we can use make_range to construct the reverse range and iterate using
that instead.
llvm-svn: 243163
Summary:
This threshold limited FunctionAttrs ability to prove arguments to be read-only.
In NVPTX, a specialized instruction ld.global.nc can be used to load memory
with non-coherent texture cache. We notice that in SHOC [1] benchmark, some
function arguments are not marked with readonly because FunctionAttrs reaches
a hardcoded threshold when analysis uses.
Removing this threshold won't cause significant regression in compilation time, because the worst-case time complexity of the algorithm is still O(# of instructions) for each parameter.
Patched by Xuetian Weng.
[1] https://github.com/vetter/shoc
Reviewers: nlewycky, jingyue, nicholas
Subscribers: nicholas, test, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11311
llvm-svn: 243141
The names for instructions inserted were previous dependent on iteration order. By deriving the names from the original instructions, we can avoid instability in tests without resorting to ordered traversals. It also makes the IR mildly easier to read at large scale.
llvm-svn: 243140
We had a few places where we did
for (unsigned i = 0, e = STy->getNumElements(); i != e; ++i) {
but those could instead do
for (auto *EltTy : STy->elements()) {
llvm-svn: 243136
Summary:
Resolving a branch allows us to ignore blocks that won't be executed, and thus make our estimate more accurate.
This patch is intended to be applied after D10205 (though it could be applied independently).
Reviewers: chandlerc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10206
llvm-svn: 243084
The new code should hopefully be equivalent to the old code; it just uses a worklist to track instructions which need to visited rather than iterating over all instructions visited each time. This should be faster, but the primary benefit is that the purpose should be more clear and the diff of adding another instruction type (forthcoming) much more obvious.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11480
llvm-svn: 243071
Deleting much of the code using trace-rewrite-statepoints and use idiomatic DEBUG statements instead. This includes adding operator<< to a helper class.
llvm-svn: 243054
We don't need to pass in the map from BDV to PhiStates; we can instead handle that externally and let the MeetPhiStates helper class just meet PhiStates.
llvm-svn: 243045
Summary:
Scalarizer has two data structures that hold information about changes
to the function, Gathered and Scattered. These are cleared in finish()
at the end of runOnFunction() if finish() detects any changes to the
function.
However, finish() was checking for changes by only checking if
Gathered was non-empty. The function visitStore() only modifies
Scattered without touching Gathered. As a result, Scattered could have
ended up having stale data if Scalarizer only scalarized store
instructions. Since the data in Scattered is used during the execution
of the pass, this introduced dangling pointer errors.
The fix is to check whether both Scattered and Gathered are empty
before deciding what to do in finish(). This also fixes a problem
where the Function can be modified although the pass returns false.
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: rnk, srhines, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10459
llvm-svn: 243040
We currently version `__asan_init` and when the ABI version doesn't match, the linker gives a `undefined reference to '__asan_init_v5'` message. From this, it might not be obvious that it's actually a version mismatch error. This patch makes the error message much clearer by changing the name of the undefined symbol to be `__asan_version_mismatch_check_xxx` (followed by the version string). We obviously don't want the initializer to be named like that, so it's a separate symbol that is used only for the purpose of version checking.
Reviewed at http://reviews.llvm.org/D11004
llvm-svn: 243003
the general GMR-in-non-LTO flag.
Without this, we have the global information during the CGSCC pipeline
for GVN and such, but don't have it available during the late loop
optimizations such as the vectorizer. Moreover, after the CGSCC pipeline
has finished we have substantially more accurate and refined call graph
information, function annotations, etc, which will make GMR even more
powerful than it is early in the pipelien.
Note that we have to play silly games with preserving AliasAnalysis
(which is now trivially preserved) in order to let a module analysis
magically be preserved into the entire function pass pipeline.
Simultaneously we have to not make GMR an immutable pass in order to be
able to re-run it and collect fresh data on the final call graph.
llvm-svn: 242999
preparation for de-coupling the AA implementations.
In order to do this, they had to become fake-scoped using the
traditional LLVM pattern of a leading initialism. These can't be actual
scoped enumerations because they're bitfields and thus inherently we use
them as integers.
I've also renamed the behavior enums that are specific to reasoning
about the mod/ref behavior of functions when called. This makes it more
clear that they have a very narrow domain of applicability.
I think there is a significantly cleaner API for all of this, but
I don't want to try to do really substantive changes for now, I just
want to refactor the things away from analysis groups so I'm preserving
the exact original design and just cleaning up the names, style, and
lifting out of the class.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10564
llvm-svn: 242963
Summary:
While working on a project I wound up generating a fairly large lookup table (10k entries) of callbacks inside of a static constructor. Clang was taking upwards of ~10 minutes to compile the lookup table. I generated a smaller test case (http://www.inolen.com/static_initializer_test.ll) that, after running with -ftime-report, pointed fingers at GlobalOpt and MemCpyOptimizer.
Running globalopt took around ~9 minutes. The slowdown came from how GlobalOpt merged stores from static constructors individually into the global initializer in EvaluateStaticConstructor. For each store it discovered and wanted to commit, it would copy the existing global initializer and then merge in the individual store. I changed this so that stores are now grouped by global, and sorted from most significant to least significant by their GEP indexes (e.g. a store to GEP 0, 0 comes before GEP 0, 0, 1). With this representation, the existing initializer can be copied and all new stores merged into it in a single pass.
With this patch and http://reviews.llvm.org/D11198, the lookup table that was taking ~10 minutes to compile now compiles in around 5 seconds. I've ran 'make check' and the test-suite, which all passed.
I'm not really sure who to tag as a reviewer, Lang mentioned that Chandler may be appropriate.
Reviewers: chandlerc, nlewycky
Subscribers: nlewycky, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11200
llvm-svn: 242935