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llvm-mirror/test/Bitcode/mdnodes-distinct-nodes-break-cycles.ll
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 5b72a15d9d BitcodeWriter: Emit uniqued subgraphs after all distinct nodes
Since forward references for uniqued node operands are expensive (and
those for distinct node operands are cheap due to
DistinctMDOperandPlaceholder), minimize forward references in uniqued
node operands.

Moreover, guarantee that when a cycle is broken by a distinct node, none
of the uniqued nodes have any forward references.  In
ValueEnumerator::EnumerateMetadata, enumerate uniqued node subgraphs
first, delaying distinct nodes until all uniqued nodes have been
handled.  This guarantees that uniqued nodes only have forward
references when there is a uniquing cycle (since r267276 changed
ValueEnumerator::organizeMetadata to partition distinct nodes in front
of uniqued nodes as a post-pass).

Note that a single uniqued subgraph can hit multiple distinct nodes at
its leaves.  Ideally these would themselves be emitted in post-order,
but this commit doesn't attempt that; I think it requires an extra pass
through the edges, which I'm not convinced is worth it (since
DistinctMDOperandPlaceholder makes forward references quite cheap
between distinct nodes).

I've added two testcases:

  - test/Bitcode/mdnodes-distinct-in-post-order.ll is just like
    test/Bitcode/mdnodes-in-post-order.ll, except with distinct nodes
    instead of uniqued ones.  This confirms that, in the absence of
    uniqued nodes, distinct nodes are still emitted in post-order.

  - test/Bitcode/mdnodes-distinct-nodes-break-cycles.ll is the minimal
    example where a naive post-order traversal would cause one uniqued
    node to forward-reference another.  IOW, it's the motivating test.

llvm-svn: 267278
2016-04-23 04:59:22 +00:00

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1.1 KiB
LLVM

; RUN: llvm-as <%s | llvm-bcanalyzer -dump | FileCheck %s
; Check that distinct nodes break uniquing cycles, so that uniqued subgraphs
; are always in post-order.
;
; It may not be immediately obvious why this is an interesting graph. There
; are three nodes in a cycle, and one of them (!1) is distinct. Because the
; entry point is !2, a naive post-order traversal would give !3, !1, !2; but
; this means when !3 is parsed the reader will need a forward reference for !2.
; Forward references for uniqued node operands are expensive, whereas they're
; cheap for distinct node operands. If the distinct node is emitted first, the
; uniqued nodes don't need any forward references at all.
; Nodes in this testcase are numbered to match how they are referenced in
; bitcode. !3 is referenced as opN=3.
; CHECK: <DISTINCT_NODE op0=3/>
!1 = distinct !{!3}
; CHECK-NEXT: <NODE op0=1/>
!2 = !{!1}
; CHECK-NEXT: <NODE op0=2/>
!3 = !{!2}
; Note: named metadata nodes are not cannot reference null so their operands
; are numbered off-by-one.
; CHECK-NEXT: <NAME
; CHECK-NEXT: <NAMED_NODE op0=1/>
!named = !{!2}