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And clarify in the "writing a pass" docs that both the legacy and new PMs are being used for the codegen/optimization pipelines. Reviewed By: ychen, asbirlea Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97515
169 lines
6.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
169 lines
6.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
==========================
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Using the New Pass Manager
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==========================
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.. contents::
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:local:
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Adding Passes to a Pass Manager
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===============================
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For how to write a new PM pass, see :doc:`this page <WritingAnLLVMNewPMPass>`.
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To add a pass to a new PM pass manager, the important thing is to match the
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pass type and the pass manager type. For example, a ``FunctionPassManager``
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can only contain function passes:
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.. code-block:: c++
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FunctionPassManager FPM;
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// InstSimplifyPass is a function pass
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FPM.addPass(InstSimplifyPass());
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If you want add a loop pass that runs on all loops in a function to a
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``FunctionPassManager``, the loop pass must be wrapped in a function pass
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adaptor that goes through all the loops in the function and runs the loop
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pass on each one.
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.. code-block:: c++
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FunctionPassManager FPM;
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// LoopRotatePass is a loop pass
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FPM.addPass(createFunctionToLoopPassAdaptor(LoopRotatePass()));
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The IR hierarchy in terms of the new PM is Module -> (CGSCC ->) Function ->
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Loop, where going through a CGSCC is optional.
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.. code-block:: c++
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FunctionPassManager FPM;
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// loop -> function
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FPM.addPass(createFunctionToLoopPassAdaptor(LoopFooPass()));
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CGSCCPassManager CGPM;
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// loop -> function -> cgscc
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CGPM.addPass(createCGSCCToFunctionPassAdaptor(createFunctionToLoopPassAdaptor(LoopFooPass())));
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// function -> cgscc
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CGPM.addPass(createCGSCCToFunctionPassAdaptor(FunctionFooPass()));
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ModulePassManager MPM;
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// loop -> function -> module
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MPM.addPass(createModuleToFunctionPassAdaptor(createFunctionToLoopPassAdaptor(LoopFooPass())));
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// function -> module
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MPM.addPass(createModuleToFunctionPassAdaptor(FunctionFooPass()));
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// loop -> function -> cgscc -> module
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MPM.addPass(createModuleToCGSCCPassAdaptor(createCGSCCToFunctionPassAdaptor(createFunctionToLoopPassAdaptor(LoopFooPass()))));
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// function -> cgscc -> module
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MPM.addPass(createModuleToCGSCCPassAdaptor(createCGSCCToFunctionPassAdaptor(FunctionFooPass())));
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A pass manager of a specific IR unit is also a pass of that kind. For
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example, a ``FunctionPassManager`` is a function pass, meaning it can be
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added to a ``ModulePassManager``:
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.. code-block:: c++
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ModulePassManager MPM;
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FunctionPassManager FPM;
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// InstSimplifyPass is a function pass
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FPM.addPass(InstSimplifyPass());
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MPM.addPass(createModuleToFunctionPassAdaptor(std::move(FPM)));
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Generally you want to group CGSCC/function/loop passes together in a pass
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manager, as opposed to adding adaptors for each pass to the containing upper
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level pass manager. For example,
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.. code-block:: c++
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ModulePassManager MPM;
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MPM.addPass(createModuleToFunctionPassAdaptor(FunctionPass1()));
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MPM.addPass(createModuleToFunctionPassAdaptor(FunctionPass2()));
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MPM.run();
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will run ``FunctionPass1`` on each function in a module, then run
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``FunctionPass2`` on each function in the module. In contrast,
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.. code-block:: c++
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ModulePassManager MPM;
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FunctionPassManager FPM;
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FPM.addPass(FunctionPass1());
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FPM.addPass(FunctionPass2());
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MPM.addPass(createModuleToFunctionPassAdaptor(std::move(FPM)));
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will run ``FunctionPass1`` and ``FunctionPass2`` on the first function in a
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module, then run both passes on the second function in the module, and so on.
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This is better for cache locality around LLVM data structures. This similarly
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applies for the other IR types, and in some cases can even affect the quality
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of optimization. For example, running all loop passes on a loop may cause a
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later loop to be able to be optimized more than if each loop pass were run
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separately.
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Inserting Passes into Default Pipelines
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=======================================
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Rather than manually adding passes to a pass manager, the typical way of
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creating a pass manager is to use a ``PassBuilder`` and call something like
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``PassBuilder::buildPerModuleDefaultPipeline()`` which creates a typical
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pipeline for a given optimization level.
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Sometimes either frontends or backends will want to inject passes into the
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pipeline. For example, frontends may want to add instrumentation, and target
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backends may want to add passes that lower custom intrinsics. For these
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cases, ``PassBuilder`` exposes callbacks that allow injecting passes into
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certain parts of the pipeline. For example,
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.. code-block:: c++
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PassBuilder PB;
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PB.registerPipelineStartEPCallback([&](ModulePassManager &MPM,
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PassBuilder::OptimizationLevel Level) {
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MPM.addPass(FooPass());
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};
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will add ``FooPass`` near the very beginning of the pipeline for pass
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managers created by that ``PassBuilder``. See the documentation for
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``PassBuilder`` for the various places that passes can be added.
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If a ``PassBuilder`` has a corresponding ``TargetMachine`` for a backend, it
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will call ``TargetMachine::registerPassBuilderCallbacks()`` to allow the
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backend to inject passes into the pipeline. This is equivalent to the legacy
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PM's ``TargetMachine::adjustPassManager()``.
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Clang's ``BackendUtil.cpp`` shows examples of a frontend adding (mostly
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sanitizer) passes to various parts of the pipeline.
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``AMDGPUTargetMachine::registerPassBuilderCallbacks()`` is an example of a
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backend adding passes to various parts of the pipeline.
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Status of the New and Legacy Pass Managers
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==========================================
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LLVM currently contains two pass managers, the legacy PM and the new PM. The
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optimization pipeline (aka the middle-end) works with both the legacy PM and
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the new PM, whereas the backend target-dependent code generation only works
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with the legacy PM.
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For the optimization pipeline, the new PM is the default PM. The legacy PM is
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available for the optimization pipeline either by setting the CMake flag
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``-DENABLE_EXPERIMENTAL_NEW_PASS_MANAGER=OFF`` when building LLVM, or by
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various compiler/linker flags, e.g. ``-flegacy-pass-manager`` for ``clang``.
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There will be efforts to deprecate and remove the legacy PM for the
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optimization pipeline in the future.
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Some IR passes are considered part of the backend codegen pipeline even if
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they are LLVM IR passes (whereas all MIR passes are codegen passes). This
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includes anything added via ``TargetPassConfig`` hooks, e.g.
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``TargetPassConfig::addCodeGenPrepare()``. As mentioned before, passes added
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in ``TargetMachine::adjustPassManager()`` are part of the optimization
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pipeline, and should have a corresponding line in
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``TargetMachine::registerPassBuilderCallbacks()``.
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Currently there are efforts to make the codegen pipeline work with the new
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PM.
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