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llvm-mirror/lib/Analysis/CGSCCPassManager.cpp
Chandler Carruth 10f8380767 [PM] Switch the CGSCC debug messages to use the standard LLVM debug
printing techniques with a DEBUG_TYPE controlling them.

It was a mistake to start re-purposing the pass manager `DebugLogging`
variable for generic debug printing -- those logs are intended to be
very minimal and primarily used for testing. More detailed and
comprehensive logging doesn't make sense there (it would only make for
brittle tests).

Moreover, we kept forgetting to propagate the `DebugLogging` variable to
various places making it also ineffective and/or unavailable. Switching
to `DEBUG_TYPE` makes this a non-issue.

llvm-svn: 310695
2017-08-11 05:47:13 +00:00

669 lines
28 KiB
C++

//===- CGSCCPassManager.cpp - Managing & running CGSCC passes -------------===//
//
// The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
//
// This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source
// License. See LICENSE.TXT for details.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
#include "llvm/Analysis/CGSCCPassManager.h"
#include "llvm/IR/CallSite.h"
#include "llvm/IR/InstIterator.h"
#define DEBUG_TYPE "cgscc"
using namespace llvm;
// Explicit template instantiations and specialization defininitions for core
// template typedefs.
namespace llvm {
// Explicit instantiations for the core proxy templates.
template class AllAnalysesOn<LazyCallGraph::SCC>;
template class AnalysisManager<LazyCallGraph::SCC, LazyCallGraph &>;
template class PassManager<LazyCallGraph::SCC, CGSCCAnalysisManager,
LazyCallGraph &, CGSCCUpdateResult &>;
template class InnerAnalysisManagerProxy<CGSCCAnalysisManager, Module>;
template class OuterAnalysisManagerProxy<ModuleAnalysisManager,
LazyCallGraph::SCC, LazyCallGraph &>;
template class OuterAnalysisManagerProxy<CGSCCAnalysisManager, Function>;
/// Explicitly specialize the pass manager run method to handle call graph
/// updates.
template <>
PreservedAnalyses
PassManager<LazyCallGraph::SCC, CGSCCAnalysisManager, LazyCallGraph &,
CGSCCUpdateResult &>::run(LazyCallGraph::SCC &InitialC,
CGSCCAnalysisManager &AM,
LazyCallGraph &G, CGSCCUpdateResult &UR) {
PreservedAnalyses PA = PreservedAnalyses::all();
if (DebugLogging)
dbgs() << "Starting CGSCC pass manager run.\n";
// The SCC may be refined while we are running passes over it, so set up
// a pointer that we can update.
LazyCallGraph::SCC *C = &InitialC;
for (auto &Pass : Passes) {
if (DebugLogging)
dbgs() << "Running pass: " << Pass->name() << " on " << *C << "\n";
PreservedAnalyses PassPA = Pass->run(*C, AM, G, UR);
// Update the SCC if necessary.
C = UR.UpdatedC ? UR.UpdatedC : C;
// Check that we didn't miss any update scenario.
assert(!UR.InvalidatedSCCs.count(C) && "Processing an invalid SCC!");
assert(C->begin() != C->end() && "Cannot have an empty SCC!");
// Update the analysis manager as each pass runs and potentially
// invalidates analyses.
AM.invalidate(*C, PassPA);
// Finally, we intersect the final preserved analyses to compute the
// aggregate preserved set for this pass manager.
PA.intersect(std::move(PassPA));
// FIXME: Historically, the pass managers all called the LLVM context's
// yield function here. We don't have a generic way to acquire the
// context and it isn't yet clear what the right pattern is for yielding
// in the new pass manager so it is currently omitted.
// ...getContext().yield();
}
// Invaliadtion was handled after each pass in the above loop for the current
// SCC. Therefore, the remaining analysis results in the AnalysisManager are
// preserved. We mark this with a set so that we don't need to inspect each
// one individually.
PA.preserveSet<AllAnalysesOn<LazyCallGraph::SCC>>();
if (DebugLogging)
dbgs() << "Finished CGSCC pass manager run.\n";
return PA;
}
bool CGSCCAnalysisManagerModuleProxy::Result::invalidate(
Module &M, const PreservedAnalyses &PA,
ModuleAnalysisManager::Invalidator &Inv) {
// If literally everything is preserved, we're done.
if (PA.areAllPreserved())
return false; // This is still a valid proxy.
// If this proxy or the call graph is going to be invalidated, we also need
// to clear all the keys coming from that analysis.
//
// We also directly invalidate the FAM's module proxy if necessary, and if
// that proxy isn't preserved we can't preserve this proxy either. We rely on
// it to handle module -> function analysis invalidation in the face of
// structural changes and so if it's unavailable we conservatively clear the
// entire SCC layer as well rather than trying to do invalidation ourselves.
auto PAC = PA.getChecker<CGSCCAnalysisManagerModuleProxy>();
if (!(PAC.preserved() || PAC.preservedSet<AllAnalysesOn<Module>>()) ||
Inv.invalidate<LazyCallGraphAnalysis>(M, PA) ||
Inv.invalidate<FunctionAnalysisManagerModuleProxy>(M, PA)) {
InnerAM->clear();
// And the proxy itself should be marked as invalid so that we can observe
// the new call graph. This isn't strictly necessary because we cheat
// above, but is still useful.
return true;
}
// Directly check if the relevant set is preserved so we can short circuit
// invalidating SCCs below.
bool AreSCCAnalysesPreserved =
PA.allAnalysesInSetPreserved<AllAnalysesOn<LazyCallGraph::SCC>>();
// Ok, we have a graph, so we can propagate the invalidation down into it.
G->buildRefSCCs();
for (auto &RC : G->postorder_ref_sccs())
for (auto &C : RC) {
Optional<PreservedAnalyses> InnerPA;
// Check to see whether the preserved set needs to be adjusted based on
// module-level analysis invalidation triggering deferred invalidation
// for this SCC.
if (auto *OuterProxy =
InnerAM->getCachedResult<ModuleAnalysisManagerCGSCCProxy>(C))
for (const auto &OuterInvalidationPair :
OuterProxy->getOuterInvalidations()) {
AnalysisKey *OuterAnalysisID = OuterInvalidationPair.first;
const auto &InnerAnalysisIDs = OuterInvalidationPair.second;
if (Inv.invalidate(OuterAnalysisID, M, PA)) {
if (!InnerPA)
InnerPA = PA;
for (AnalysisKey *InnerAnalysisID : InnerAnalysisIDs)
InnerPA->abandon(InnerAnalysisID);
}
}
// Check if we needed a custom PA set. If so we'll need to run the inner
// invalidation.
if (InnerPA) {
InnerAM->invalidate(C, *InnerPA);
continue;
}
// Otherwise we only need to do invalidation if the original PA set didn't
// preserve all SCC analyses.
if (!AreSCCAnalysesPreserved)
InnerAM->invalidate(C, PA);
}
// Return false to indicate that this result is still a valid proxy.
return false;
}
template <>
CGSCCAnalysisManagerModuleProxy::Result
CGSCCAnalysisManagerModuleProxy::run(Module &M, ModuleAnalysisManager &AM) {
// Force the Function analysis manager to also be available so that it can
// be accessed in an SCC analysis and proxied onward to function passes.
// FIXME: It is pretty awkward to just drop the result here and assert that
// we can find it again later.
(void)AM.getResult<FunctionAnalysisManagerModuleProxy>(M);
return Result(*InnerAM, AM.getResult<LazyCallGraphAnalysis>(M));
}
AnalysisKey FunctionAnalysisManagerCGSCCProxy::Key;
FunctionAnalysisManagerCGSCCProxy::Result
FunctionAnalysisManagerCGSCCProxy::run(LazyCallGraph::SCC &C,
CGSCCAnalysisManager &AM,
LazyCallGraph &CG) {
// Collect the FunctionAnalysisManager from the Module layer and use that to
// build the proxy result.
//
// This allows us to rely on the FunctionAnalysisMangaerModuleProxy to
// invalidate the function analyses.
auto &MAM = AM.getResult<ModuleAnalysisManagerCGSCCProxy>(C, CG).getManager();
Module &M = *C.begin()->getFunction().getParent();
auto *FAMProxy = MAM.getCachedResult<FunctionAnalysisManagerModuleProxy>(M);
assert(FAMProxy && "The CGSCC pass manager requires that the FAM module "
"proxy is run on the module prior to entering the CGSCC "
"walk.");
// Note that we special-case invalidation handling of this proxy in the CGSCC
// analysis manager's Module proxy. This avoids the need to do anything
// special here to recompute all of this if ever the FAM's module proxy goes
// away.
return Result(FAMProxy->getManager());
}
bool FunctionAnalysisManagerCGSCCProxy::Result::invalidate(
LazyCallGraph::SCC &C, const PreservedAnalyses &PA,
CGSCCAnalysisManager::Invalidator &Inv) {
// If literally everything is preserved, we're done.
if (PA.areAllPreserved())
return false; // This is still a valid proxy.
// If this proxy isn't marked as preserved, then even if the result remains
// valid, the key itself may no longer be valid, so we clear everything.
//
// Note that in order to preserve this proxy, a module pass must ensure that
// the FAM has been completely updated to handle the deletion of functions.
// Specifically, any FAM-cached results for those functions need to have been
// forcibly cleared. When preserved, this proxy will only invalidate results
// cached on functions *still in the module* at the end of the module pass.
auto PAC = PA.getChecker<FunctionAnalysisManagerCGSCCProxy>();
if (!PAC.preserved() && !PAC.preservedSet<AllAnalysesOn<LazyCallGraph::SCC>>()) {
for (LazyCallGraph::Node &N : C)
FAM->clear(N.getFunction());
return true;
}
// Directly check if the relevant set is preserved.
bool AreFunctionAnalysesPreserved =
PA.allAnalysesInSetPreserved<AllAnalysesOn<Function>>();
// Now walk all the functions to see if any inner analysis invalidation is
// necessary.
for (LazyCallGraph::Node &N : C) {
Function &F = N.getFunction();
Optional<PreservedAnalyses> FunctionPA;
// Check to see whether the preserved set needs to be pruned based on
// SCC-level analysis invalidation that triggers deferred invalidation
// registered with the outer analysis manager proxy for this function.
if (auto *OuterProxy =
FAM->getCachedResult<CGSCCAnalysisManagerFunctionProxy>(F))
for (const auto &OuterInvalidationPair :
OuterProxy->getOuterInvalidations()) {
AnalysisKey *OuterAnalysisID = OuterInvalidationPair.first;
const auto &InnerAnalysisIDs = OuterInvalidationPair.second;
if (Inv.invalidate(OuterAnalysisID, C, PA)) {
if (!FunctionPA)
FunctionPA = PA;
for (AnalysisKey *InnerAnalysisID : InnerAnalysisIDs)
FunctionPA->abandon(InnerAnalysisID);
}
}
// Check if we needed a custom PA set, and if so we'll need to run the
// inner invalidation.
if (FunctionPA) {
FAM->invalidate(F, *FunctionPA);
continue;
}
// Otherwise we only need to do invalidation if the original PA set didn't
// preserve all function analyses.
if (!AreFunctionAnalysesPreserved)
FAM->invalidate(F, PA);
}
// Return false to indicate that this result is still a valid proxy.
return false;
}
} // End llvm namespace
/// When a new SCC is created for the graph and there might be function
/// analysis results cached for the functions now in that SCC two forms of
/// updates are required.
///
/// First, a proxy from the SCC to the FunctionAnalysisManager needs to be
/// created so that any subsequent invalidation events to the SCC are
/// propagated to the function analysis results cached for functions within it.
///
/// Second, if any of the functions within the SCC have analysis results with
/// outer analysis dependencies, then those dependencies would point to the
/// *wrong* SCC's analysis result. We forcibly invalidate the necessary
/// function analyses so that they don't retain stale handles.
static void updateNewSCCFunctionAnalyses(LazyCallGraph::SCC &C,
LazyCallGraph &G,
CGSCCAnalysisManager &AM) {
// Get the relevant function analysis manager.
auto &FAM =
AM.getResult<FunctionAnalysisManagerCGSCCProxy>(C, G).getManager();
// Now walk the functions in this SCC and invalidate any function analysis
// results that might have outer dependencies on an SCC analysis.
for (LazyCallGraph::Node &N : C) {
Function &F = N.getFunction();
auto *OuterProxy =
FAM.getCachedResult<CGSCCAnalysisManagerFunctionProxy>(F);
if (!OuterProxy)
// No outer analyses were queried, nothing to do.
continue;
// Forcibly abandon all the inner analyses with dependencies, but
// invalidate nothing else.
auto PA = PreservedAnalyses::all();
for (const auto &OuterInvalidationPair :
OuterProxy->getOuterInvalidations()) {
const auto &InnerAnalysisIDs = OuterInvalidationPair.second;
for (AnalysisKey *InnerAnalysisID : InnerAnalysisIDs)
PA.abandon(InnerAnalysisID);
}
// Now invalidate anything we found.
FAM.invalidate(F, PA);
}
}
namespace {
/// Helper function to update both the \c CGSCCAnalysisManager \p AM and the \c
/// CGSCCPassManager's \c CGSCCUpdateResult \p UR based on a range of newly
/// added SCCs.
///
/// The range of new SCCs must be in postorder already. The SCC they were split
/// out of must be provided as \p C. The current node being mutated and
/// triggering updates must be passed as \p N.
///
/// This function returns the SCC containing \p N. This will be either \p C if
/// no new SCCs have been split out, or it will be the new SCC containing \p N.
template <typename SCCRangeT>
LazyCallGraph::SCC *
incorporateNewSCCRange(const SCCRangeT &NewSCCRange, LazyCallGraph &G,
LazyCallGraph::Node &N, LazyCallGraph::SCC *C,
CGSCCAnalysisManager &AM, CGSCCUpdateResult &UR) {
typedef LazyCallGraph::SCC SCC;
if (NewSCCRange.begin() == NewSCCRange.end())
return C;
// Add the current SCC to the worklist as its shape has changed.
UR.CWorklist.insert(C);
DEBUG(dbgs() << "Enqueuing the existing SCC in the worklist:" << *C << "\n");
SCC *OldC = C;
// Update the current SCC. Note that if we have new SCCs, this must actually
// change the SCC.
assert(C != &*NewSCCRange.begin() &&
"Cannot insert new SCCs without changing current SCC!");
C = &*NewSCCRange.begin();
assert(G.lookupSCC(N) == C && "Failed to update current SCC!");
// If we had a cached FAM proxy originally, we will want to create more of
// them for each SCC that was split off.
bool NeedFAMProxy =
AM.getCachedResult<FunctionAnalysisManagerCGSCCProxy>(*OldC) != nullptr;
// We need to propagate an invalidation call to all but the newly current SCC
// because the outer pass manager won't do that for us after splitting them.
// FIXME: We should accept a PreservedAnalysis from the CG updater so that if
// there are preserved ananalyses we can avoid invalidating them here for
// split-off SCCs.
// We know however that this will preserve any FAM proxy so go ahead and mark
// that.
PreservedAnalyses PA;
PA.preserve<FunctionAnalysisManagerCGSCCProxy>();
AM.invalidate(*OldC, PA);
// Ensure the now-current SCC's function analyses are updated.
if (NeedFAMProxy)
updateNewSCCFunctionAnalyses(*C, G, AM);
for (SCC &NewC :
reverse(make_range(std::next(NewSCCRange.begin()), NewSCCRange.end()))) {
assert(C != &NewC && "No need to re-visit the current SCC!");
assert(OldC != &NewC && "Already handled the original SCC!");
UR.CWorklist.insert(&NewC);
DEBUG(dbgs() << "Enqueuing a newly formed SCC:" << NewC << "\n");
// Ensure new SCCs' function analyses are updated.
if (NeedFAMProxy)
updateNewSCCFunctionAnalyses(NewC, G, AM);
// Also propagate a normal invalidation to the new SCC as only the current
// will get one from the pass manager infrastructure.
AM.invalidate(NewC, PA);
}
return C;
}
}
LazyCallGraph::SCC &llvm::updateCGAndAnalysisManagerForFunctionPass(
LazyCallGraph &G, LazyCallGraph::SCC &InitialC, LazyCallGraph::Node &N,
CGSCCAnalysisManager &AM, CGSCCUpdateResult &UR) {
typedef LazyCallGraph::Node Node;
typedef LazyCallGraph::Edge Edge;
typedef LazyCallGraph::SCC SCC;
typedef LazyCallGraph::RefSCC RefSCC;
RefSCC &InitialRC = InitialC.getOuterRefSCC();
SCC *C = &InitialC;
RefSCC *RC = &InitialRC;
Function &F = N.getFunction();
// Walk the function body and build up the set of retained, promoted, and
// demoted edges.
SmallVector<Constant *, 16> Worklist;
SmallPtrSet<Constant *, 16> Visited;
SmallPtrSet<Node *, 16> RetainedEdges;
SmallSetVector<Node *, 4> PromotedRefTargets;
SmallSetVector<Node *, 4> DemotedCallTargets;
// First walk the function and handle all called functions. We do this first
// because if there is a single call edge, whether there are ref edges is
// irrelevant.
for (Instruction &I : instructions(F))
if (auto CS = CallSite(&I))
if (Function *Callee = CS.getCalledFunction())
if (Visited.insert(Callee).second && !Callee->isDeclaration()) {
Node &CalleeN = *G.lookup(*Callee);
Edge *E = N->lookup(CalleeN);
// FIXME: We should really handle adding new calls. While it will
// make downstream usage more complex, there is no fundamental
// limitation and it will allow passes within the CGSCC to be a bit
// more flexible in what transforms they can do. Until then, we
// verify that new calls haven't been introduced.
assert(E && "No function transformations should introduce *new* "
"call edges! Any new calls should be modeled as "
"promoted existing ref edges!");
bool Inserted = RetainedEdges.insert(&CalleeN).second;
(void)Inserted;
assert(Inserted && "We should never visit a function twice.");
if (!E->isCall())
PromotedRefTargets.insert(&CalleeN);
}
// Now walk all references.
for (Instruction &I : instructions(F))
for (Value *Op : I.operand_values())
if (Constant *C = dyn_cast<Constant>(Op))
if (Visited.insert(C).second)
Worklist.push_back(C);
auto VisitRef = [&](Function &Referee) {
Node &RefereeN = *G.lookup(Referee);
Edge *E = N->lookup(RefereeN);
// FIXME: Similarly to new calls, we also currently preclude
// introducing new references. See above for details.
assert(E && "No function transformations should introduce *new* ref "
"edges! Any new ref edges would require IPO which "
"function passes aren't allowed to do!");
bool Inserted = RetainedEdges.insert(&RefereeN).second;
(void)Inserted;
assert(Inserted && "We should never visit a function twice.");
if (E->isCall())
DemotedCallTargets.insert(&RefereeN);
};
LazyCallGraph::visitReferences(Worklist, Visited, VisitRef);
// Include synthetic reference edges to known, defined lib functions.
for (auto *F : G.getLibFunctions())
// While the list of lib functions doesn't have repeats, don't re-visit
// anything handled above.
if (!Visited.count(F))
VisitRef(*F);
// First remove all of the edges that are no longer present in this function.
// The first step makes these edges uniformly ref edges and accumulates them
// into a separate data structure so removal doesn't invalidate anything.
SmallVector<Node *, 4> DeadTargets;
for (Edge &E : *N) {
if (RetainedEdges.count(&E.getNode()))
continue;
SCC &TargetC = *G.lookupSCC(E.getNode());
RefSCC &TargetRC = TargetC.getOuterRefSCC();
if (&TargetRC == RC && E.isCall()) {
if (C != &TargetC) {
// For separate SCCs this is trivial.
RC->switchTrivialInternalEdgeToRef(N, E.getNode());
} else {
// Now update the call graph.
C = incorporateNewSCCRange(RC->switchInternalEdgeToRef(N, E.getNode()),
G, N, C, AM, UR);
}
}
// Now that this is ready for actual removal, put it into our list.
DeadTargets.push_back(&E.getNode());
}
// Remove the easy cases quickly and actually pull them out of our list.
DeadTargets.erase(
llvm::remove_if(DeadTargets,
[&](Node *TargetN) {
SCC &TargetC = *G.lookupSCC(*TargetN);
RefSCC &TargetRC = TargetC.getOuterRefSCC();
// We can't trivially remove internal targets, so skip
// those.
if (&TargetRC == RC)
return false;
RC->removeOutgoingEdge(N, *TargetN);
DEBUG(dbgs() << "Deleting outgoing edge from '" << N
<< "' to '" << TargetN << "'\n");
return true;
}),
DeadTargets.end());
// Now do a batch removal of the internal ref edges left.
auto NewRefSCCs = RC->removeInternalRefEdge(N, DeadTargets);
if (!NewRefSCCs.empty()) {
// The old RefSCC is dead, mark it as such.
UR.InvalidatedRefSCCs.insert(RC);
// Note that we don't bother to invalidate analyses as ref-edge
// connectivity is not really observable in any way and is intended
// exclusively to be used for ordering of transforms rather than for
// analysis conclusions.
// Update RC to the "bottom".
assert(G.lookupSCC(N) == C && "Changed the SCC when splitting RefSCCs!");
RC = &C->getOuterRefSCC();
assert(G.lookupRefSCC(N) == RC && "Failed to update current RefSCC!");
// The RC worklist is in reverse postorder, so we enqueue the new ones in
// RPO except for the one which contains the source node as that is the
// "bottom" we will continue processing in the bottom-up walk.
assert(NewRefSCCs.front() == RC &&
"New current RefSCC not first in the returned list!");
for (RefSCC *NewRC :
reverse(make_range(std::next(NewRefSCCs.begin()), NewRefSCCs.end()))) {
assert(NewRC != RC && "Should not encounter the current RefSCC further "
"in the postorder list of new RefSCCs.");
UR.RCWorklist.insert(NewRC);
DEBUG(dbgs() << "Enqueuing a new RefSCC in the update worklist: "
<< *NewRC << "\n");
}
}
// Next demote all the call edges that are now ref edges. This helps make
// the SCCs small which should minimize the work below as we don't want to
// form cycles that this would break.
for (Node *RefTarget : DemotedCallTargets) {
SCC &TargetC = *G.lookupSCC(*RefTarget);
RefSCC &TargetRC = TargetC.getOuterRefSCC();
// The easy case is when the target RefSCC is not this RefSCC. This is
// only supported when the target RefSCC is a child of this RefSCC.
if (&TargetRC != RC) {
assert(RC->isAncestorOf(TargetRC) &&
"Cannot potentially form RefSCC cycles here!");
RC->switchOutgoingEdgeToRef(N, *RefTarget);
DEBUG(dbgs() << "Switch outgoing call edge to a ref edge from '" << N
<< "' to '" << *RefTarget << "'\n");
continue;
}
// We are switching an internal call edge to a ref edge. This may split up
// some SCCs.
if (C != &TargetC) {
// For separate SCCs this is trivial.
RC->switchTrivialInternalEdgeToRef(N, *RefTarget);
continue;
}
// Now update the call graph.
C = incorporateNewSCCRange(RC->switchInternalEdgeToRef(N, *RefTarget), G, N,
C, AM, UR);
}
// Now promote ref edges into call edges.
for (Node *CallTarget : PromotedRefTargets) {
SCC &TargetC = *G.lookupSCC(*CallTarget);
RefSCC &TargetRC = TargetC.getOuterRefSCC();
// The easy case is when the target RefSCC is not this RefSCC. This is
// only supported when the target RefSCC is a child of this RefSCC.
if (&TargetRC != RC) {
assert(RC->isAncestorOf(TargetRC) &&
"Cannot potentially form RefSCC cycles here!");
RC->switchOutgoingEdgeToCall(N, *CallTarget);
DEBUG(dbgs() << "Switch outgoing ref edge to a call edge from '" << N
<< "' to '" << *CallTarget << "'\n");
continue;
}
DEBUG(dbgs() << "Switch an internal ref edge to a call edge from '" << N
<< "' to '" << *CallTarget << "'\n");
// Otherwise we are switching an internal ref edge to a call edge. This
// may merge away some SCCs, and we add those to the UpdateResult. We also
// need to make sure to update the worklist in the event SCCs have moved
// before the current one in the post-order sequence
bool HasFunctionAnalysisProxy = false;
auto InitialSCCIndex = RC->find(*C) - RC->begin();
bool FormedCycle = RC->switchInternalEdgeToCall(
N, *CallTarget, [&](ArrayRef<SCC *> MergedSCCs) {
for (SCC *MergedC : MergedSCCs) {
assert(MergedC != &TargetC && "Cannot merge away the target SCC!");
HasFunctionAnalysisProxy |=
AM.getCachedResult<FunctionAnalysisManagerCGSCCProxy>(
*MergedC) != nullptr;
// Mark that this SCC will no longer be valid.
UR.InvalidatedSCCs.insert(MergedC);
// FIXME: We should really do a 'clear' here to forcibly release
// memory, but we don't have a good way of doing that and
// preserving the function analyses.
auto PA = PreservedAnalyses::allInSet<AllAnalysesOn<Function>>();
PA.preserve<FunctionAnalysisManagerCGSCCProxy>();
AM.invalidate(*MergedC, PA);
}
});
// If we formed a cycle by creating this call, we need to update more data
// structures.
if (FormedCycle) {
C = &TargetC;
assert(G.lookupSCC(N) == C && "Failed to update current SCC!");
// If one of the invalidated SCCs had a cached proxy to a function
// analysis manager, we need to create a proxy in the new current SCC as
// the invaliadted SCCs had their functions moved.
if (HasFunctionAnalysisProxy)
AM.getResult<FunctionAnalysisManagerCGSCCProxy>(*C, G);
// Any analyses cached for this SCC are no longer precise as the shape
// has changed by introducing this cycle. However, we have taken care to
// update the proxies so it remains valide.
auto PA = PreservedAnalyses::allInSet<AllAnalysesOn<Function>>();
PA.preserve<FunctionAnalysisManagerCGSCCProxy>();
AM.invalidate(*C, PA);
}
auto NewSCCIndex = RC->find(*C) - RC->begin();
// If we have actually moved an SCC to be topologically "below" the current
// one due to merging, we will need to revisit the current SCC after
// visiting those moved SCCs.
//
// It is critical that we *do not* revisit the current SCC unless we
// actually move SCCs in the process of merging because otherwise we may
// form a cycle where an SCC is split apart, merged, split, merged and so
// on infinitely.
if (InitialSCCIndex < NewSCCIndex) {
// Put our current SCC back onto the worklist as we'll visit other SCCs
// that are now definitively ordered prior to the current one in the
// post-order sequence, and may end up observing more precise context to
// optimize the current SCC.
UR.CWorklist.insert(C);
DEBUG(dbgs() << "Enqueuing the existing SCC in the worklist: " << *C
<< "\n");
// Enqueue in reverse order as we pop off the back of the worklist.
for (SCC &MovedC : reverse(make_range(RC->begin() + InitialSCCIndex,
RC->begin() + NewSCCIndex))) {
UR.CWorklist.insert(&MovedC);
DEBUG(dbgs() << "Enqueuing a newly earlier in post-order SCC: "
<< MovedC << "\n");
}
}
}
assert(!UR.InvalidatedSCCs.count(C) && "Invalidated the current SCC!");
assert(!UR.InvalidatedRefSCCs.count(RC) && "Invalidated the current RefSCC!");
assert(&C->getOuterRefSCC() == RC && "Current SCC not in current RefSCC!");
// Record the current RefSCC and SCC for higher layers of the CGSCC pass
// manager now that all the updates have been applied.
if (RC != &InitialRC)
UR.UpdatedRC = RC;
if (C != &InitialC)
UR.UpdatedC = C;
return *C;
}