1
0
mirror of https://github.com/RPCS3/llvm-mirror.git synced 2024-11-25 04:02:41 +01:00
llvm-mirror/test/Transforms/GlobalOpt/metadata.ll
James Molloy 85bd37fc58 [GlobalOpt] Demote globals to locals more aggressively
Global to local demotion can speed up programs that use globals a lot. It is particularly useful with LTO, when the entire call graph is known and most functions have been internalized.

For a global to be demoted, it must only be accessed by one function and that function:
  1. Must never recurse directly or indirectly, else the GV would be clobbered.
  2. Must never rely on the value in GV at the start of the function (apart from the initializer).

GlobalOpt can already do this, but it is hamstrung and only ever tries to demote globals inside "main", because C++ gives extra guarantees about how main is called - once and only once.

In LTO mode, we can often prove the first property (if the function is internal by this point, we know enough about the callgraph to determine if it could possibly recurse). FunctionAttrs now infers the "norecurse" attribute for this reason.

The second property can be proven for a subset of functions by proving that all loads from GV are dominated by a store to GV. This is conservative in the name of compile time - this only requires a DominatorTree which is fairly cheap in the grand scheme of things. We could do more fancy stuff with MemoryDependenceAnalysis too to catch more cases but this appears to catch most of the useful ones in my testing.

llvm-svn: 253168
2015-11-15 14:21:37 +00:00

33 lines
1.0 KiB
LLVM

; RUN: opt -S -globalopt < %s | FileCheck %s
; PR6112 - When globalopt does RAUW(@G, %G), the metadata reference should drop
; to null. Function local metadata that references @G from a different function
; to that containing %G should likewise drop to null.
@G = internal global i8** null
define i32 @main(i32 %argc, i8** %argv) norecurse {
; CHECK-LABEL: @main(
; CHECK: %G = alloca
store i8** %argv, i8*** @G
ret i32 0
}
define void @foo(i32 %x) {
; Note: these arguments look like MDNodes, but they're really syntactic sugar
; for 'MetadataAsValue::get(ValueAsMetadata::get(Value*))'. When @G drops to
; null, the ValueAsMetadata instance gets replaced by metadata !{}, or
; MDNode::get({}).
call void @llvm.foo(metadata i8*** @G, metadata i32 %x)
; CHECK: call void @llvm.foo(metadata ![[EMPTY:[0-9]+]], metadata i32 %x)
ret void
}
declare void @llvm.foo(metadata, metadata) nounwind readnone
!named = !{!0}
; CHECK: !named = !{![[NULL:[0-9]+]]}
!0 = !{i8*** @G}
; CHECK-DAG: ![[NULL]] = !{null}
; CHECK-DAG: ![[EMPTY]] = !{}