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Commit Graph

712 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Fangrui Song
4cdc54cceb [LTO] onfig::addSaveTemps: clear ResolutionFile upon an error
Otherwise ld.lld -save-temps will crash when writing to ResolutionFile.

llvm-lto2 -save-temps does not crash because it exits immediately.

Reviewed By: evgeny777

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75426
2020-03-02 17:49:04 -08:00
Francis Visoiu Mistrih
67c4e6afe6 [LTO][Legacy] Add explicit dependency on BinaryFormat
This fixes some windows bots.
2020-02-28 15:50:43 -08:00
Francis Visoiu Mistrih
b4279d9528 [LTO][Legacy] Add new API to query Mach-O CPU (sub)type
Tools working with object files on Darwin (e.g. lipo) may need to know
properties like the CPU type and subtype of a bitcode file. The logic of
converting a triple to a Mach-O CPU_(SUB_)TYPE should be provided by
LLVM instead of relying on tools to re-implement it.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75067
2020-02-28 12:56:05 -08:00
Alexandre Ganea
e8dc2577fb Improve comments after 8404aeb56a73ab24f9b295111de3b37a37f0b841. 2020-02-18 14:25:21 -05:00
Alexandre Ganea
ae05eb086d [Support] On Windows, ensure hardware_concurrency() extends to all CPU sockets and all NUMA groups
The goal of this patch is to maximize CPU utilization on multi-socket or high core count systems, so that parallel computations such as LLD/ThinLTO can use all hardware threads in the system. Before this patch, on Windows, a maximum of 64 hardware threads could be used at most, in some cases dispatched only on one CPU socket.

== Background ==
Windows doesn't have a flat cpu_set_t like Linux. Instead, it projects hardware CPUs (or NUMA nodes) to applications through a concept of "processor groups". A "processor" is the smallest unit of execution on a CPU, that is, an hyper-thread if SMT is active; a core otherwise. There's a limit of 32-bit processors on older 32-bit versions of Windows, which later was raised to 64-processors with 64-bit versions of Windows. This limit comes from the affinity mask, which historically is represented by the sizeof(void*). Consequently, the concept of "processor groups" was introduced for dealing with systems with more than 64 hyper-threads.

By default, the Windows OS assigns only one "processor group" to each starting application, in a round-robin manner. If the application wants to use more processors, it needs to programmatically enable it, by assigning threads to other "processor groups". This also means that affinity cannot cross "processor group" boundaries; one can only specify a "preferred" group on start-up, but the application is free to allocate more groups if it wants to.

This creates a peculiar situation, where newer CPUs like the AMD EPYC 7702P (64-cores, 128-hyperthreads) are projected by the OS as two (2) "processor groups". This means that by default, an application can only use half of the cores. This situation could only get worse in the years to come, as dies with more cores will appear on the market.

== The problem ==
The heavyweight_hardware_concurrency() API was introduced so that only *one hardware thread per core* was used. Once that API returns, that original intention is lost, only the number of threads is retained. Consider a situation, on Windows, where the system has 2 CPU sockets, 18 cores each, each core having 2 hyper-threads, for a total of 72 hyper-threads. Both heavyweight_hardware_concurrency() and hardware_concurrency() currently return 36, because on Windows they are simply wrappers over std:🧵:hardware_concurrency() -- which can only return processors from the current "processor group".

== The changes in this patch ==
To solve this situation, we capture (and retain) the initial intention until the point of usage, through a new ThreadPoolStrategy class. The number of threads to use is deferred as late as possible, until the moment where the std::threads are created (ThreadPool in the case of ThinLTO).

When using hardware_concurrency(), setting ThreadCount to 0 now means to use all the possible hardware CPU (SMT) threads. Providing a ThreadCount above to the maximum number of threads will have no effect, the maximum will be used instead.
The heavyweight_hardware_concurrency() is similar to hardware_concurrency(), except that only one thread per hardware *core* will be used.

When LLVM_ENABLE_THREADS is OFF, the threading APIs will always return 1, to ensure any caller loops will be exercised at least once.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71775
2020-02-14 10:24:22 -05:00
Bill Wendling
0816222e8f Revert "Remove redundant "std::move"s in return statements"
The build failed with

  error: call to deleted constructor of 'llvm::Error'

errors.

This reverts commit 1c2241a7936bf85aa68aef94bd40c3ba77d8ddf2.
2020-02-10 07:07:40 -08:00
Bill Wendling
e45b5f33f3 Remove redundant "std::move"s in return statements 2020-02-10 06:39:44 -08:00
Johannes Doerfert
9354843292 [Attributor] Add an Attributor CGSCC pass and run it
In addition to the module pass, this patch introduces a CGSCC pass that
runs the Attributor on a strongly connected component of the call graph
(both old and new PM). The Attributor was always design to be used on a
subset of functions which makes this patch mostly mechanical.

The one change is that we give up `norecurse` deduction in the module
pass in favor of doing it during the CGSCC pass. This makes the
interfaces simpler but can be revisited if needed.

Reviewed By: hfinkel

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70767
2020-02-08 21:27:34 -06:00
Johannes Doerfert
96971b934b [OpenMP] Introduce the OpenMPOpt transformation pass
The OpenMPOpt pass is a CGSCC pass in which OpenMP specific
optimizations can reside.

The OpenMPOpt pass uses the OpenMPKinds.def file to identify runtime
calls and their uses. This allows targeted transformations and eases
their implementation.

This initial patch deduplicates `__kmpc_global_thread_num` and
`omp_get_thread_num` calls. We can also identify arguments that are
equivalent to such a call result and use it instead. Later we can
determine "gtid" arguments based on the use in kernel functions etc.

Reviewed By: JonChesterfield

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69930
2020-02-08 14:47:03 -06:00
Russell Gallop
716e00498b [LLD][ELF] Add time-trace to ELF LLD
This adds some of LLD specific scopes and picks up optimisation scopes
via LTO/ThinLTO. Makes use of TimeProfiler multi-thread support added in
77e6bb3c.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71060
2020-02-06 12:14:13 +00:00
Francis Visoiu Mistrih
57aee84cb1 [Remarks] Extend the RemarkStreamer to support other emitters
This extends the RemarkStreamer to allow for other emitters (e.g.
frontends, SIL, etc.) to emit remarks through a common interface.

See changes in llvm/docs/Remarks.rst for motivation and design choices.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73676
2020-02-04 17:16:02 -08:00
Jonas Devlieghere
83ccf6171a [llvm] Replace SmallStr.str().str() with std::string conversion operator.
Use the std::string conversion operator introduced in
d7049213d0fcda691c9e79f9b41e357198d99738.
2020-01-29 21:16:46 -08:00
Gabor Horvath
fe44f75159 [LTO] Add optimization remarks for removed functions
This only works with regular LTO for now.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73597
2020-01-29 15:53:51 -08:00
Benjamin Kramer
87d13166c7 Make llvm::StringRef to std::string conversions explicit.
This is how it should've been and brings it more in line with
std::string_view. There should be no functional change here.

This is mostly mechanical from a custom clang-tidy check, with a lot of
manual fixups. It uncovers a lot of minor inefficiencies.

This doesn't actually modify StringRef yet, I'll do that in a follow-up.
2020-01-28 23:25:25 +01:00
Teresa Johnson
32209014dc Restore "[LTO/WPD] Enable aggressive WPD under LTO option"
This restores 59733525d37cf9ad88b5021b33ecdbaf2e18911c (D71913), along
with bot fix 19c76989bb505c3117730c47df85fd3800ea2767.

The bot failure should be fixed by D73418, committed as
af954e441a5170a75687699d91d85e0692929d43.

I also added a fix for non-x86 bot failures by requiring x86 in new test
lld/test/ELF/lto/devirt_vcall_vis_public.ll.
2020-01-27 07:55:05 -08:00
Teresa Johnson
b8d82ed595 Revert "[LTO/WPD] Enable aggressive WPD under LTO option"
This reverts commit 59733525d37cf9ad88b5021b33ecdbaf2e18911c.

There is a windows sanitizer bot failure in one of the cfi tests
that I will need some time to figure out:
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/sanitizer-windows/builds/57155/steps/stage%201%20check/logs/stdio
2020-01-23 17:29:24 -08:00
Teresa Johnson
7a368427db [LTO/WPD] Enable aggressive WPD under LTO option
Summary:
Third part in series to support Safe Whole Program Devirtualization
Enablement, see RFC here:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-December/137543.html

This patch adds type test metadata under -fwhole-program-vtables,
even for classes without hidden visibility. It then changes WPD to skip
devirtualization for a virtual function call when any of the compatible
vtables has public vcall visibility.

Additionally, internal LLVM options as well as lld and gold-plugin
options are added which enable upgrading all public vcall visibility
to linkage unit (hidden) visibility during LTO. This enables the more
aggressive WPD to kick in based on LTO time knowledge of the visibility
guarantees.

Support was added to all flavors of LTO WPD (regular, hybrid and
index-only), and to both the new and old LTO APIs.

Unfortunately it was not simple to split the first and second parts of
this part of the change (the unconditional emission of type tests and
the upgrading of the vcall visiblity) as I needed a way to upgrade the
public visibility on legacy WPD llvm assembly tests that don't include
linkage unit vcall visibility specifiers, to avoid a lot of test churn.

I also added a mechanism to LowerTypeTests that allows dropping type
test assume sequences we now aggressively insert when we invoke
distributed ThinLTO backends with null indexes, which is used in testing
mode, and which doesn't invoke the normal ThinLTO backend pipeline.

Depends on D71907 and D71911.

Reviewers: pcc, evgeny777, steven_wu, espindola

Subscribers: emaste, Prazek, inglorion, arichardson, hiraditya, MaskRay, dexonsmith, dang, davidxl, cfe-commits, llvm-commits

Tags: #clang, #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71913
2020-01-23 16:09:44 -08:00
Nico Weber
2f7698b8c3 remove an include that's unused after r347592 2020-01-16 12:49:54 -05:00
Mircea Trofin
e90406ee2a [llvm] Make new pass manager's OptimizationLevel a class
Summary:
The old pass manager separated speed optimization and size optimization
levels into two unsigned values. Coallescing both in an enum in the new
pass manager may lead to unintentional casts and comparisons.

In particular, taking a look at how the loop unroll passes were constructed
previously, the Os/Oz are now (==new pass manager) treated just like O3,
likely unintentionally.

This change disallows raw comparisons between optimization levels, to
avoid such unintended effects. As an effect, the O{s|z} behavior changes
for loop unrolling and loop unroll and jam, matching O2 rather than O3.

The change also parameterizes the threshold values used for loop
unrolling, primarily to aid testing.

Reviewers: tejohnson, davidxl

Reviewed By: tejohnson

Subscribers: zzheng, ychen, mehdi_amini, hiraditya, steven_wu, dexonsmith, dang, cfe-commits, llvm-commits

Tags: #clang, #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72547
2020-01-16 09:00:56 -08:00
Teresa Johnson
474f1e7bdb [LTO] Constify lto::Config reference passed to backends (NFC)
The lto::Config object saved on the global LTO object should not be
updated by any of the LTO backends. Otherwise we could run into
interference between threads utilizing it. Motivated by some proposed
changes that would have caused it to get modified in the ThinLTO
backends.
2020-01-13 12:26:17 -08:00
Wei Mi
a2a8575704 [ThinLTO] Pass CodeGenOpts like UnrollLoops/VectorizeLoop/VectorizeSLP
down to pass builder in ltobackend.

Currently CodeGenOpts like UnrollLoops/VectorizeLoop/VectorizeSLP in clang
are not passed down to pass builder in ltobackend when new pass manager is
used. This is inconsistent with the behavior when new pass manager is used
and thinlto is not used. Such inconsistency causes slp vectorization pass
not being enabled in ltobackend for O3 + thinlto right now. This patch
fixes that.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72386
2020-01-09 21:13:11 -08:00
evgeny
0c4768b2e9 [ThinLTO] Show preserved symbols in DOT files
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71608
2019-12-18 18:33:15 +03:00
Rui Ueyama
bd7cf0f396 Revert an accidental commit af5ca40b47b3e85c3add81ccdc0b787c4bc355ae 2019-12-13 15:17:40 +09:00
Rui Ueyama
8ba96bda06 temporary 2019-12-13 14:35:03 +09:00
Teresa Johnson
3a2a2bb628 [LTO] Support for embedding bitcode section during LTO
Summary:
This adds support for embedding bitcode in a binary during LTO. The libLTO gains supports the `-lto-embed-bitcode` flag. The option allows users of the LTO library to embed a bitcode section. For example, LLD can pass the option via `ld.lld -mllvm=-lto-embed-bitcode`.

This feature allows doing something comparable to `clang -c -fembed-bitcode`, but on the (LTO) linker level. Having bitcode alongside native code has many use-cases. To give an example, the MacOS linker can create a `-bitcode_bundle` section containing bitcode. Also, having this feature built into LLVM is an alternative to 3rd party tools such as [[ https://github.com/travitch/whole-program-llvm | wllvm ]] or [[ https://github.com/SRI-CSL/gllvm | gllvm ]]. As with these tools, this feature simplifies creating "whole-program" llvm bitcode files, but in contrast to wllvm/gllvm it does not rely on a specific llvm frontend/driver.

Patch by Josef Eisl <josef.eisl@oracle.com>

Reviewers: #llvm, #clang, rsmith, pcc, alexshap, tejohnson

Reviewed By: tejohnson

Subscribers: tejohnson, mehdi_amini, inglorion, hiraditya, aheejin, steven_wu, dexonsmith, dang, cfe-commits, llvm-commits, #llvm, #clang

Tags: #clang, #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68213
2019-12-12 12:34:19 -08:00
Francis Visoiu Mistrih
a0d8c69089 [Remarks][ThinLTO] Use the correct file extension based on the format
Since we now have multiple formats, the ThinLTO remark files should also
respect that.
2019-12-02 13:04:43 -08:00
Tom Stellard
28bf7f3536 [cmake] Explicitly mark libraries defined in lib/ as "Component Libraries"
Summary:
Most libraries are defined in the lib/ directory but there are also a
few libraries defined in tools/ e.g. libLLVM, libLTO.  I'm defining
"Component Libraries" as libraries defined in lib/ that may be included in
libLLVM.so.  Explicitly marking the libraries in lib/ as component
libraries allows us to remove some fragile checks that attempt to
differentiate between lib/ libraries and tools/ libraires:

1. In tools/llvm-shlib, because
llvm_map_components_to_libnames(LIB_NAMES "all") returned a list of
all libraries defined in the whole project, there was custom code
needed to filter out libraries defined in tools/, none of which should
be included in libLLVM.so.  This code assumed that any library
defined as static was from lib/ and everything else should be
excluded.

With this change, llvm_map_components_to_libnames(LIB_NAMES, "all")
only returns libraries that have been added to the LLVM_COMPONENT_LIBS
global cmake property, so this custom filtering logic can be removed.
Doing this also fixes the build with BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON
and LLVM_BUILD_LLVM_DYLIB=ON.

2. There was some code in llvm_add_library that assumed that
libraries defined in lib/ would not have LLVM_LINK_COMPONENTS or
ARG_LINK_COMPONENTS set.  This is only true because libraries
defined lib lib/ use LLVMBuild.txt and don't set these values.
This code has been fixed now to check if the library has been
explicitly marked as a component library, which should now make it
easier to remove LLVMBuild at some point in the future.

I have tested this patch on Windows, MacOS and Linux with release builds
and the following combinations of CMake options:

- "" (No options)
- -DLLVM_BUILD_LLVM_DYLIB=ON
- -DLLVM_LINK_LLVM_DYLIB=ON
- -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON
- -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON -DLLVM_BUILD_LLVM_DYLIB=ON
- -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON -DLLVM_LINK_LLVM_DYLIB=ON

Reviewers: beanz, smeenai, compnerd, phosek

Reviewed By: beanz

Subscribers: wuzish, jholewinski, arsenm, dschuff, jyknight, dylanmckay, sdardis, nemanjai, jvesely, nhaehnle, mgorny, mehdi_amini, sbc100, jgravelle-google, hiraditya, aheejin, fedor.sergeev, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, apazos, sabuasal, niosHD, jrtc27, MaskRay, zzheng, edward-jones, atanasyan, steven_wu, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, dexonsmith, PkmX, jocewei, jsji, dang, Jim, lenary, s.egerton, pzheng, sameer.abuasal, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70179
2019-11-21 10:48:08 -08:00
Francis Visoiu Mistrih
2123c1f2ec [LTO][Legacy] Add API for passing LLVM options separately
In order to correctly pass options to LLVM, including options containing
spaces which are used as delimiters for multiple options in
lto_codegen_debug_options, add a new API:
lto_codegen_debug_options_array.

Unfortunately, tools/lto has no testing infrastructure yet, so there are
no tests associated with this patch.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70463
2019-11-19 16:30:37 -08:00
evgeny
0736e026a7 [ThinLTO] Simplify code. NFC 2019-11-19 15:51:25 +03:00
evgeny
c21d991a71 Recommit "[ThinLTO] Add correctness check for RO/WO variable import"
ValueInfo has user-defined 'operator bool' which allows incorrect implicit conversion
to GlobalValue::GUID (which is unsigned long). This causes bugs which are hard to
track and should be removed in future.
2019-11-15 16:13:19 +03:00
Reid Kleckner
b3a7316049 Add missing includes needed to prune LLVMContext.h include, NFC
These are a pre-requisite to removing #include "llvm/Support/Options.h"
from LLVMContext.h: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70280
2019-11-14 15:23:15 -08:00
Benjamin Kramer
5fe79eb481 Revert "[ThinLTO] Add correctness check for RO/WO variable import"
This reverts commit a2292cc537b561416c21e8d4017715d652c144cc. Breaks
clang selfhost w/ThinLTO.
2019-11-14 16:07:13 +01:00
evgeny
3ab27f6ce8 [ThinLTO] Add correctness check for RO/WO variable import
This patch adds an assertion check for exported read/write-only
variables to be also in import list for module. If they aren't
we may face linker errors, because read/write-only variables are
internalized in their source modules. The patch also changes
export lists to store ValueInfo instead of GUID for performance
considerations.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70128
2019-11-14 12:24:05 +03:00
Reid Kleckner
3f676674e7 Move CodeGenFileType enum to Support/CodeGen.h
Avoids the need to include TargetMachine.h from various places just for
an enum. Various other enums live here, such as the optimization level,
TLS model, etc. Data suggests that this change probably doesn't matter,
but it seems nice to have anyway.
2019-11-13 16:39:34 -08:00
Michael Liao
87e90e0fd2 Fix compilation warning on the trailing whitespace. NFC. 2019-10-24 09:55:06 -04:00
Benjamin Kramer
263418463b Hide implementation details in anonymous namespaces. NFC. 2019-10-24 10:48:43 +02:00
Eugene Leviant
7787d23a97 [ThinLTOCodeGenerator] Add support for index-based WPD
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68950

llvm-svn: 375219
2019-10-18 10:54:14 +00:00
Oliver Stannard
6aaf81e821 Reland: Dead Virtual Function Elimination
Remove dead virtual functions from vtables with
replaceNonMetadataUsesWith, so that CGProfile metadata gets cleaned up
correctly.

Original commit message:

Currently, it is hard for the compiler to remove unused C++ virtual
functions, because they are all referenced from vtables, which are referenced
by constructors. This means that if the constructor is called from any live
code, then we keep every virtual function in the final link, even if there
are no call sites which can use it.

This patch allows unused virtual functions to be removed during LTO (and
regular compilation in limited circumstances) by using type metadata to match
virtual function call sites to the vtable slots they might load from. This
information can then be used in the global dead code elimination pass instead
of the references from vtables to virtual functions, to more accurately
determine which functions are reachable.

To make this transformation safe, I have changed clang's code-generation to
always load virtual function pointers using the llvm.type.checked.load
intrinsic, instead of regular load instructions. I originally tried writing
this using clang's existing code-generation, which uses the llvm.type.test
and llvm.assume intrinsics after doing a normal load. However, it is possible
for optimisations to obscure the relationship between the GEP, load and
llvm.type.test, causing GlobalDCE to fail to find virtual function call
sites.

The existing linkage and visibility types don't accurately describe the scope
in which a virtual call could be made which uses a given vtable. This is
wider than the visibility of the type itself, because a virtual function call
could be made using a more-visible base class. I've added a new
!vcall_visibility metadata type to represent this, described in
TypeMetadata.rst. The internalization pass and libLTO have been updated to
change this metadata when linking is performed.

This doesn't currently work with ThinLTO, because it needs to see every call
to llvm.type.checked.load in the linkage unit. It might be possible to
extend this optimisation to be able to use the ThinLTO summary, as was done
for devirtualization, but until then that combination is rejected in the
clang driver.

To test this, I've written a fuzzer which generates random C++ programs with
complex class inheritance graphs, and virtual functions called through object
and function pointers of different types. The programs are spread across
multiple translation units and DSOs to test the different visibility
restrictions.

I've also tried doing bootstrap builds of LLVM to test this. This isn't
ideal, because only classes in anonymous namespaces can be optimised with
-fvisibility=default, and some parts of LLVM (plugins and bugpoint) do not
work correctly with -fvisibility=hidden. However, there are only 12 test
failures when building with -fvisibility=hidden (and an unmodified compiler),
and this change does not cause any new failures for either value of
-fvisibility.

On the 7 C++ sub-benchmarks of SPEC2006, this gives a geomean code-size
reduction of ~6%, over a baseline compiled with "-O2 -flto
-fvisibility=hidden -fwhole-program-vtables". The best cases are reductions
of ~14% in 450.soplex and 483.xalancbmk, and there are no code size
increases.

I've also run this on a set of 8 mbed-os examples compiled for Armv7M, which
show a geomean size reduction of ~3%, again with no size increases.

I had hoped that this would have no effect on performance, which would allow
it to awlays be enabled (when using -fwhole-program-vtables). However, the
changes in clang to use the llvm.type.checked.load intrinsic are causing ~1%
performance regression in the C++ parts of SPEC2006. It should be possible to
recover some of this perf loss by teaching optimisations about the
llvm.type.checked.load intrinsic, which would make it worth turning this on
by default (though it's still dependent on -fwhole-program-vtables).

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63932

llvm-svn: 375094
2019-10-17 09:58:57 +00:00
Guillaume Chatelet
89f87ca322 [Alignment][NFC] Remove dependency on GlobalObject::setAlignment(unsigned)
Summary:
This is patch is part of a series to introduce an Alignment type.
See this thread for context: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-July/133851.html
See this patch for the introduction of the type: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64790

Reviewers: courbet

Subscribers: arsenm, mehdi_amini, jvesely, nhaehnle, hiraditya, steven_wu, dexonsmith, dang, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68944

llvm-svn: 374880
2019-10-15 11:24:36 +00:00
Jorge Gorbe Moya
6a19d78c0a Revert "Dead Virtual Function Elimination"
This reverts commit 9f6a873268e1ad9855873d9d8007086c0d01cf4f.

llvm-svn: 374844
2019-10-14 23:25:25 +00:00
Oliver Stannard
901c588c1f Dead Virtual Function Elimination
Currently, it is hard for the compiler to remove unused C++ virtual
functions, because they are all referenced from vtables, which are referenced
by constructors. This means that if the constructor is called from any live
code, then we keep every virtual function in the final link, even if there
are no call sites which can use it.

This patch allows unused virtual functions to be removed during LTO (and
regular compilation in limited circumstances) by using type metadata to match
virtual function call sites to the vtable slots they might load from. This
information can then be used in the global dead code elimination pass instead
of the references from vtables to virtual functions, to more accurately
determine which functions are reachable.

To make this transformation safe, I have changed clang's code-generation to
always load virtual function pointers using the llvm.type.checked.load
intrinsic, instead of regular load instructions. I originally tried writing
this using clang's existing code-generation, which uses the llvm.type.test
and llvm.assume intrinsics after doing a normal load. However, it is possible
for optimisations to obscure the relationship between the GEP, load and
llvm.type.test, causing GlobalDCE to fail to find virtual function call
sites.

The existing linkage and visibility types don't accurately describe the scope
in which a virtual call could be made which uses a given vtable. This is
wider than the visibility of the type itself, because a virtual function call
could be made using a more-visible base class. I've added a new
!vcall_visibility metadata type to represent this, described in
TypeMetadata.rst. The internalization pass and libLTO have been updated to
change this metadata when linking is performed.

This doesn't currently work with ThinLTO, because it needs to see every call
to llvm.type.checked.load in the linkage unit. It might be possible to
extend this optimisation to be able to use the ThinLTO summary, as was done
for devirtualization, but until then that combination is rejected in the
clang driver.

To test this, I've written a fuzzer which generates random C++ programs with
complex class inheritance graphs, and virtual functions called through object
and function pointers of different types. The programs are spread across
multiple translation units and DSOs to test the different visibility
restrictions.

I've also tried doing bootstrap builds of LLVM to test this. This isn't
ideal, because only classes in anonymous namespaces can be optimised with
-fvisibility=default, and some parts of LLVM (plugins and bugpoint) do not
work correctly with -fvisibility=hidden. However, there are only 12 test
failures when building with -fvisibility=hidden (and an unmodified compiler),
and this change does not cause any new failures for either value of
-fvisibility.

On the 7 C++ sub-benchmarks of SPEC2006, this gives a geomean code-size
reduction of ~6%, over a baseline compiled with "-O2 -flto
-fvisibility=hidden -fwhole-program-vtables". The best cases are reductions
of ~14% in 450.soplex and 483.xalancbmk, and there are no code size
increases.

I've also run this on a set of 8 mbed-os examples compiled for Armv7M, which
show a geomean size reduction of ~3%, again with no size increases.

I had hoped that this would have no effect on performance, which would allow
it to awlays be enabled (when using -fwhole-program-vtables). However, the
changes in clang to use the llvm.type.checked.load intrinsic are causing ~1%
performance regression in the C++ parts of SPEC2006. It should be possible to
recover some of this perf loss by teaching optimisations about the
llvm.type.checked.load intrinsic, which would make it worth turning this on
by default (though it's still dependent on -fwhole-program-vtables).

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63932

llvm-svn: 374539
2019-10-11 11:59:55 +00:00
Jordan Rose
fa21e7962b ADT: Save a word in every StringSet entry
Add a specialization to StringMap (actually StringMapEntry) for a
value type of NoneType (the type of llvm::None), and use it for
StringSet. This'll save us a word from every entry in a StringSet,
used for alignment with the size_t that stores the string length.

I could have gone all the way to some kind of empty base class
optimization, but that seemed like overkill. Someone can consider
adding that in the future, though.

https://reviews.llvm.org/D68586

llvm-svn: 374440
2019-10-10 20:22:53 +00:00
Teresa Johnson
d2f6522f79 [ThinLTO/WPD] Ensure devirtualized targets use promoted symbol when necessary
Summary:
This fixes a hole in the handling of devirtualized targets that were
local but need promoting due to devirtualization in another module. We
were not correctly referencing the promoted symbol in some cases. Make
sure the code that updates the name also looks at the ExportedGUIDs set
by utilizing a callback that checks all conditions (the callback
utilized by the internalization/promotion code).

Reviewers: pcc, davidxl, hiraditya

Subscribers: mehdi_amini, Prazek, inglorion, steven_wu, dexonsmith, dang, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68159

llvm-svn: 373485
2019-10-02 16:36:59 +00:00
Steven Wu
7fb3882581 [LTO][Legacy] Add new C inferface to query libcall functions
Summary:
This is needed to implemented the same approach as lld (implemented in r338434)
for how to handling symbols that can be generated by LTO code generator
but not present in the symbol table for linker that uses legacy C APIs.

libLTO is in charge of providing the list of symbols. Linker is in
charge of implementing the eager loading from static libraries using
the list of symbols.

rdar://problem/52853974

Reviewers: tejohnson, bd1976llvm, deadalnix, espindola

Reviewed By: tejohnson

Subscribers: emaste, arichardson, hiraditya, MaskRay, dang, kledzik, mehdi_amini, inglorion, jkorous, dexonsmith, ributzka, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67568

llvm-svn: 372021
2019-09-16 18:49:54 +00:00
Jan Korous
f726c5e75f [Support] Add overload writeFileAtomically(std::function Writer)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67424

llvm-svn: 371890
2019-09-13 20:08:27 +00:00
Tim Northover
1bb14916f2 AArch64: support arm64_32, an ILP32 slice for watchOS.
This is the main CodeGen patch to support the arm64_32 watchOS ABI in LLVM.
FastISel is mostly disabled for now since it would generate incorrect code for
ILP32.

llvm-svn: 371722
2019-09-12 10:22:23 +00:00
Fangrui Song
41ef1c755f [LTO] Avoid calling GlobalValue::getGUID (MD5) twice
llvm-svn: 371593
2019-09-11 07:38:21 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer
d6a50350fd Do a sweep of symbol internalization. NFC.
llvm-svn: 369803
2019-08-23 19:59:23 +00:00
Teresa Johnson
c649b1f9bb [ThinLTO] Fix handling of weak interposable symbols
Summary:
Keep aliasees alive if their alias is live, otherwise we end up with an
alias to a declaration, which is invalid. This can happen when the
aliasee is weak and non-prevailing.

This fix exposed the fact that we were then attempting to internalize
the weak symbol, which was not exported as it was not prevailing. We
should not internalize interposable symbols in general, unless this is
the prevailing copy, since it can lead to incorrect inlining and other
optimizations. Most of the changes in this patch are due to the
restructuring required to pass down the prevailing callback.

Finally, while implementing the test cases, I found that in the case of
a weak aliasee that is still marked not live because its alias isn't
live, after dropping the definition we incorrectly marked the
declaration with weak linkage when resolving prevailing symbols in the
module. This was due to some special case handling for symbols marked
WeakLinkage in the summary located before instead of after a subsequent
check for the symbol being a declaration. It turns out that we don't
actually need this special case handling any more (looking back at the
history, when that was added the code was structured quite differently)
- we will correctly mark with weak linkage further below when the
definition hasn't been dropped.

Fixes PR42542.

Reviewers: pcc

Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, steven_wu, dexonsmith, dang, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66264

llvm-svn: 369766
2019-08-23 15:18:58 +00:00
Taewook Oh
67a07e74bc [NewPM][PassInstrumentation] IR printing support for (Thin)LTO
Summary: IR printing has not been correctly supported with (Thin)LTO if the new pass manager is enabled. Previously we only get outputs from backend(codegen) passes, as they are still under legacy pass manager even when the new pass manager is enabled. This patch addresses the issue and enables IR printing for optimization passes with new pass manager + (Thin)LTO setting.

Reviewers: fedor.sergeev, philip.pfaffe

Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, hiraditya, steven_wu, dexonsmith, dang, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66253

llvm-svn: 369024
2019-08-15 17:47:44 +00:00