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ReStructuredText
.. _loop-terminology:
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===========================================
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LLVM Loop Terminology (and Canonical Forms)
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===========================================
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.. contents::
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:local:
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Loop Definition
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===============
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Loops are an important concept for a code optimizer. In LLVM, detection
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of loops in a control-flow graph is done by :ref:`loopinfo`. It is based
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on the following definition.
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A loop is a subset of nodes from the control-flow graph (CFG; where
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nodes represent basic blocks) with the following properties:
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1. The induced subgraph (which is the subgraph that contains all the
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edges from the CFG within the loop) is strongly connected
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(every node is reachable from all others).
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2. All edges from outside the subset into the subset point to the same
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node, called the **header**. As a consequence, the header dominates
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all nodes in the loop (i.e. every execution path to any of the loop's
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node will have to pass through the header).
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3. The loop is the maximum subset with these properties. That is, no
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additional nodes from the CFG can be added such that the induced
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subgraph would still be strongly connected and the header would
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remain the same.
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In computer science literature, this is often called a *natural loop*.
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In LLVM, this is the only definition of a loop.
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Terminology
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-----------
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The definition of a loop comes with some additional terminology:
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* An **entering block** (or **loop predecessor**) is a non-loop node
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that has an edge into the loop (necessarily the header). If there is
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only one entering block entering block, and its only edge is to the
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header, it is also called the loop's **preheader**. The preheader
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dominates the loop without itself being part of the loop.
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* A **latch** is a loop node that has an edge to the header.
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* A **backedge** is an edge from a latch to the header.
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* An **exiting edge** is an edge from inside the loop to a node outside
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of the loop. The source of such an edge is called an **exiting block**, its
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target is an **exit block**.
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.. image:: ./loop-terminology.svg
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:width: 400 px
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Important Notes
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---------------
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This loop definition has some noteworthy consequences:
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* A node can be the header of at most one loop. As such, a loop can be
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identified by its header. Due to the header being the only entry into
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a loop, it can be called a Single-Entry-Multiple-Exits (SEME) region.
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* For basic blocks that are not reachable from the function's entry, the
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concept of loops is undefined. This follows from the concept of
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dominance being undefined as well.
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* The smallest loop consists of a single basic block that branches to
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itself. In this case that block is the header, latch (and exiting
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block if it has another edge to a different block) at the same time.
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A single block that has no branch to itself is not considered a loop,
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even though it is trivially strongly connected.
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.. image:: ./loop-single.svg
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:width: 300 px
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In this case, the role of header, exiting block and latch fall to the
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same node. :ref:`loopinfo` reports this as:
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.. code-block:: console
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$ opt input.ll -loops -analyze
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Loop at depth 1 containing: %for.body<header><latch><exiting>
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* Loops can be nested inside each other. That is, a loop's node set can
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be a subset of another loop with a different loop header. The loop
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hierarchy in a function forms a forest: Each top-level loop is the
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root of the tree of the loops nested inside it.
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.. image:: ./loop-nested.svg
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:width: 350 px
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* It is not possible that two loops share only a few of their nodes.
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Two loops are either disjoint or one is nested inside the other. In
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the example below the left and right subsets both violate the
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maximality condition. Only the merge of both sets is considered a loop.
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.. image:: ./loop-nonmaximal.svg
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:width: 250 px
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* It is also possible that two logical loops share a header, but are
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considered a single loop by LLVM:
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.. code-block:: C
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for (int i = 0; i < 128; ++i)
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for (int j = 0; j < 128; ++j)
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body(i,j);
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which might be represented in LLVM-IR as follows. Note that there is
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only a single header and hence just a single loop.
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.. image:: ./loop-merge.svg
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:width: 400 px
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The :ref:`LoopSimplify <loop-terminology-loop-simplify>` pass will
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detect the loop and ensure separate headers for the outer and inner loop.
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.. image:: ./loop-separate.svg
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:width: 400 px
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* A cycle in the CFG does not imply there is a loop. The example below
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shows such a CFG, where there is no header node that dominates all
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other nodes in the cycle. This is called **irreducible control-flow**.
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.. image:: ./loop-irreducible.svg
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:width: 150 px
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The term reducible results from the ability to collapse the CFG into a
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single node by successively replacing one of three base structures with
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a single node: A sequential execution of basic blocks, a conditional
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branching (or switch) with re-joining, and a basic block looping on itself.
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`Wikipedia <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Control-flow_graph#Reducibility>`_
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has a more formal definition, which basically says that every cycle has
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a dominating header.
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* Irreducible control-flow can occur at any level of the loop nesting.
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That is, a loop that itself does not contain any loops can still have
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cyclic control flow in its body; a loop that is not nested inside
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another loop can still be part of an outer cycle; and there can be
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additional cycles between any two loops where one is contained in the other.
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* Exiting edges are not the only way to break out of a loop. Other
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possibilities are unreachable terminators, [[noreturn]] functions,
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exceptions, signals, and your computer's power button.
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* A basic block "inside" the loop that does not have a path back to the
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loop (i.e. to a latch or header) is not considered part of the loop.
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This is illustrated by the following code.
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.. code-block:: C
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for (unsigned i = 0; i <= n; ++i) {
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if (c1) {
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// When reaching this block, we will have exited the loop.
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do_something();
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break;
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}
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if (c2) {
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// abort(), never returns, so we have exited the loop.
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abort();
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}
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if (c3) {
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// The unreachable allows the compiler to assume that this will not rejoin the loop.
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do_something();
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__builtin_unreachable();
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}
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if (c4) {
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// This statically infinite loop is not nested because control-flow will not continue with the for-loop.
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while(true) {
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do_something();
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}
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}
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}
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* There is no requirement for the control flow to eventually leave the
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loop, i.e. a loop can be infinite. A **statically infinite loop** is a
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loop that has no exiting edges. A **dynamically infinite loop** has
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exiting edges, but it is possible to be never taken. This may happen
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only under some circumstances, such as when n == UINT_MAX in the code
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below.
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.. code-block:: C
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for (unsigned i = 0; i <= n; ++i)
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body(i);
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It is possible for the optimizer to turn a dynamically infinite loop
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into a statically infinite loop, for instance when it can prove that the
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exiting condition is always false. Because the exiting edge is never
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taken, the optimizer can change the conditional branch into an
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unconditional one.
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Note that under some circumstances the compiler may assume that a loop will
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eventually terminate without proving it. For instance, it may remove a loop
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that does not do anything in its body. If the loop was infinite, this
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optimization resulted in an "infinite" performance speed-up. A call
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to the intrinsic :ref:`llvm.sideeffect<llvm_sideeffect>` can be added
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into the loop to ensure that the optimizer does not make this assumption
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without proof.
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* The number of executions of the loop header before leaving the loop is
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the **loop trip count** (or **iteration count**). If the loop should
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not be executed at all, a **loop guard** must skip the entire loop:
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.. image:: ./loop-guard.svg
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:width: 500 px
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Since the first thing a loop header might do is to check whether there
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is another execution and if not, immediately exit without doing any work
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(also see :ref:`loop-terminology-loop-rotate`), loop trip count is not
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the best measure of a loop's number of iterations. For instance, the
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number of header executions of the code below for a non-positive n
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(before loop rotation) is 1, even though the loop body is not executed
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at all.
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.. code-block:: C
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for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i)
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body(i);
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A better measure is the **backedge-taken count**, which is the number of
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times any of the backedges is taken before the loop. It is one less than
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the trip count for executions that enter the header.
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.. _loopinfo:
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LoopInfo
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========
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LoopInfo is the core analysis for obtaining information about loops.
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There are few key implications of the definitions given above which
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are important for working successfully with this interface.
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* LoopInfo does not contain information about non-loop cycles. As a
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result, it is not suitable for any algorithm which requires complete
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cycle detection for correctness.
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* LoopInfo provides an interface for enumerating all top level loops
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(e.g. those not contained in any other loop). From there, you may
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walk the tree of sub-loops rooted in that top level loop.
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* Loops which become statically unreachable during optimization *must*
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be removed from LoopInfo. If this can not be done for some reason,
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then the optimization is *required* to preserve the static
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reachability of the loop.
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.. _loop-terminology-loop-simplify:
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Loop Simplify Form
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==================
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The Loop Simplify Form is a canonical form that makes
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several analyses and transformations simpler and more effective.
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It is ensured by the LoopSimplify
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(:ref:`-loop-simplify <passes-loop-simplify>`) pass and is automatically
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added by the pass managers when scheduling a LoopPass.
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This pass is implemented in
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`LoopSimplify.h <https://llvm.org/doxygen/LoopSimplify_8h_source.html>`_.
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When it is successful, the loop has:
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* A preheader.
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* A single backedge (which implies that there is a single latch).
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* Dedicated exits. That is, no exit block for the loop
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has a predecessor that is outside the loop. This implies
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that all exit blocks are dominated by the loop header.
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.. _loop-terminology-lcssa:
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Loop Closed SSA (LCSSA)
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=======================
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A program is in Loop Closed SSA Form if it is in SSA form
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and all values that are defined in a loop are used only inside
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this loop.
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Programs written in LLVM IR are always in SSA form but not necessarily
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in LCSSA. To achieve the latter, for each value that is live across the
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loop boundary, single entry PHI nodes are inserted to each of the exit blocks
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[#lcssa-construction]_ in order to "close" these values inside the loop.
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In particular, consider the following loop:
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.. code-block:: C
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c = ...;
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for (...) {
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if (c)
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X1 = ...
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else
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X2 = ...
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X3 = phi(X1, X2); // X3 defined
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}
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... = X3 + 4; // X3 used, i.e. live
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// outside the loop
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In the inner loop, the X3 is defined inside the loop, but used
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outside of it. In Loop Closed SSA form, this would be represented as follows:
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.. code-block:: C
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c = ...;
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for (...) {
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if (c)
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X1 = ...
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else
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X2 = ...
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X3 = phi(X1, X2);
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}
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X4 = phi(X3);
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... = X4 + 4;
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This is still valid LLVM; the extra phi nodes are purely redundant,
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but all LoopPass'es are required to preserve them.
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This form is ensured by the LCSSA (:ref:`-lcssa <passes-lcssa>`)
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pass and is added automatically by the LoopPassManager when
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scheduling a LoopPass.
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After the loop optimizations are done, these extra phi nodes
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will be deleted by :ref:`-instcombine <passes-instcombine>`.
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Note that an exit block is outside of a loop, so how can such a phi "close"
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the value inside the loop since it uses it outside of it ? First of all,
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for phi nodes, as
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`mentioned in the LangRef <https://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#id311>`_:
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"the use of each incoming value is deemed to occur on the edge from the
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corresponding predecessor block to the current block". Now, an
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edge to an exit block is considered outside of the loop because
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if we take that edge, it leads us clearly out of the loop.
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However, an edge doesn't actually contain any IR, so in source code,
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we have to choose a convention of whether the use happens in
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the current block or in the respective predecessor. For LCSSA's purpose,
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we consider the use happens in the latter (so as to consider the
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use inside) [#point-of-use-phis]_.
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The major benefit of LCSSA is that it makes many other loop optimizations
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simpler.
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First of all, a simple observation is that if one needs to see all
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the outside users, they can just iterate over all the (loop closing)
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PHI nodes in the exit blocks (the alternative would be to
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scan the def-use chain [#def-use-chain]_ of all instructions in the loop).
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Then, consider for example
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:ref:`-loop-unswitch <passes-loop-unswitch>` ing the loop above.
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Because it is in LCSSA form, we know that any value defined inside of
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the loop will be used either only inside the loop or in a loop closing
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PHI node. In this case, the only loop closing PHI node is X4.
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This means that we can just copy the loop and change the X4
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accordingly, like so:
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.. code-block:: C
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c = ...;
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if (c) {
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for (...) {
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if (true)
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X1 = ...
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else
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X2 = ...
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X3 = phi(X1, X2);
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}
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} else {
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for (...) {
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if (false)
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X1' = ...
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else
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X2' = ...
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X3' = phi(X1', X2');
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}
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}
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X4 = phi(X3, X3')
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Now, all uses of X4 will get the updated value (in general,
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if a loop is in LCSSA form, in any loop transformation,
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we only need to update the loop closing PHI nodes for the changes
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to take effect). If we did not have Loop Closed SSA form, it means that X3 could
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possibly be used outside the loop. So, we would have to introduce the
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X4 (which is the new X3) and replace all uses of X3 with that.
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However, we should note that because LLVM keeps a def-use chain
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[#def-use-chain]_ for each Value, we wouldn't need
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to perform data-flow analysis to find and replace all the uses
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(there is even a utility function, replaceAllUsesWith(),
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that performs this transformation by iterating the def-use chain).
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Another important advantage is that the behavior of all uses
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of an induction variable is the same. Without this, you need to
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distinguish the case when the variable is used outside of
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the loop it is defined in, for example:
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.. code-block:: C
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for (i = 0; i < 100; i++) {
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for (j = 0; j < 100; j++) {
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k = i + j;
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use(k); // use 1
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}
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use(k); // use 2
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}
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Looking from the outer loop with the normal SSA form, the first use of k
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is not well-behaved, while the second one is an induction variable with
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base 100 and step 1. Although, in practice, and in the LLVM context,
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such cases can be handled effectively by SCEV. Scalar Evolution
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(:ref:`scalar-evolution <passes-scalar-evolution>`) or SCEV, is a
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(analysis) pass that analyzes and categorizes the evolution of scalar
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expressions in loops.
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In general, it's easier to use SCEV in loops that are in LCSSA form.
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The evolution of a scalar (loop-variant) expression that
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SCEV can analyze is, by definition, relative to a loop.
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An expression is represented in LLVM by an
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`llvm::Instruction <https://llvm.org/doxygen/classllvm_1_1Instruction.html>`_.
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If the expression is inside two (or more) loops (which can only
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happen if the loops are nested, like in the example above) and you want
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to get an analysis of its evolution (from SCEV),
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you have to also specify relative to what Loop you want it.
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Specifically, you have to use
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`getSCEVAtScope() <https://llvm.org/doxygen/classllvm_1_1ScalarEvolution.html#a21d6ee82eed29080d911dbb548a8bb68>`_.
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However, if all loops are in LCSSA form, each expression is actually
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represented by two different llvm::Instructions. One inside the loop
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and one outside, which is the loop-closing PHI node and represents
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the value of the expression after the last iteration (effectively,
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we break each loop-variant expression into two expressions and so, every
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expression is at most in one loop). You can now just use
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`getSCEV() <https://llvm.org/doxygen/classllvm_1_1ScalarEvolution.html#a30bd18ac905eacf3601bc6a553a9ff49>`_.
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and which of these two llvm::Instructions you pass to it disambiguates
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the context / scope / relative loop.
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.. rubric:: Footnotes
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.. [#lcssa-construction] To insert these loop-closing PHI nodes, one has to
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(re-)compute dominance frontiers (if the loop has multiple exits).
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.. [#point-of-use-phis] Considering the point of use of a PHI entry value
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to be in the respective predecessor is a convention across the whole LLVM.
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The reason is mostly practical; for example it preserves the dominance
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property of SSA. It is also just an overapproximation of the actual
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number of uses; the incoming block could branch to another block in which
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case the value is not actually used but there are no side-effects (it might
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increase its live range which is not relevant in LCSSA though).
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Furthermore, we can gain some intuition if we consider liveness:
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A PHI is *usually* inserted in the current block because the value can't
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be used from this point and onwards (i.e. the current block is a dominance
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frontier). It doesn't make sense to consider that the value is used in
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the current block (because of the PHI) since the value stops being live
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before the PHI. In some sense the PHI definition just "replaces" the original
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value definition and doesn't actually use it. It should be stressed that
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this analogy is only used as an example and does not pose any strict
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requirements. For example, the value might dominate the current block
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but we can still insert a PHI (as we do with LCSSA PHI nodes) *and*
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use the original value afterwards (in which case the two live ranges overlap,
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although in LCSSA (the whole point is that) we never do that).
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.. [#def-use-chain] A property of SSA is that there exists a def-use chain
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for each definition, which is a list of all the uses of this definition.
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LLVM implements this property by keeping a list of all the uses of a Value
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in an internal data structure.
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"More Canonical" Loops
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======================
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.. _loop-terminology-loop-rotate:
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Rotated Loops
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-------------
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Loops are rotated by the LoopRotate (:ref:`loop-rotate <passes-loop-rotate>`)
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pass, which converts loops into do/while style loops and is
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implemented in
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`LoopRotation.h <https://llvm.org/doxygen/LoopRotation_8h_source.html>`_. Example:
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.. code-block:: C
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void test(int n) {
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for (int i = 0; i < n; i += 1)
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// Loop body
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}
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is transformed to:
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.. code-block:: C
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void test(int n) {
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int i = 0;
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do {
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// Loop body
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i += 1;
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} while (i < n);
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}
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**Warning**: This transformation is valid only if the compiler
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can prove that the loop body will be executed at least once. Otherwise,
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it has to insert a guard which will test it at runtime. In the example
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above, that would be:
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.. code-block:: C
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void test(int n) {
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int i = 0;
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if (n > 0) {
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do {
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// Loop body
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i += 1;
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} while (i < n);
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}
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}
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It's important to understand the effect of loop rotation
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at the LLVM IR level. We follow with the previous examples
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in LLVM IR while also providing a graphical representation
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of the control-flow graphs (CFG). You can get the same graphical
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results by utilizing the :ref:`view-cfg <passes-view-cfg>` pass.
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The initial **for** loop could be translated to:
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.. code-block:: none
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define void @test(i32 %n) {
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entry:
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br label %for.header
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for.header:
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%i = phi i32 [ 0, %entry ], [ %i.next, %latch ]
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%cond = icmp slt i32 %i, %n
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br i1 %cond, label %body, label %exit
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body:
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; Loop body
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br label %latch
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latch:
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%i.next = add nsw i32 %i, 1
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br label %for.header
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exit:
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ret void
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}
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.. image:: ./loop-terminology-initial-loop.png
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:width: 400 px
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Before we explain how LoopRotate will actually
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transform this loop, here's how we could convert
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it (by hand) to a do-while style loop.
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.. code-block:: none
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define void @test(i32 %n) {
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entry:
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br label %body
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body:
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%i = phi i32 [ 0, %entry ], [ %i.next, %latch ]
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; Loop body
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br label %latch
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latch:
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%i.next = add nsw i32 %i, 1
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%cond = icmp slt i32 %i.next, %n
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br i1 %cond, label %body, label %exit
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exit:
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ret void
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}
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.. image:: ./loop-terminology-rotated-loop.png
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:width: 400 px
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Note two things:
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* The condition check was moved to the "bottom" of the loop, i.e.
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the latch. This is something that LoopRotate does by copying the header
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|
of the loop to the latch.
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* The compiler in this case can't deduce that the loop will
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definitely execute at least once so the above transformation
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is not valid. As mentioned above, a guard has to be inserted,
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which is something that LoopRotate will do.
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This is how LoopRotate transforms this loop:
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.. code-block:: none
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|
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define void @test(i32 %n) {
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entry:
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%guard_cond = icmp slt i32 0, %n
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br i1 %guard_cond, label %loop.preheader, label %exit
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loop.preheader:
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br label %body
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body:
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%i2 = phi i32 [ 0, %loop.preheader ], [ %i.next, %latch ]
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br label %latch
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latch:
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%i.next = add nsw i32 %i2, 1
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|
%cond = icmp slt i32 %i.next, %n
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|
br i1 %cond, label %body, label %loop.exit
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loop.exit:
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|
br label %exit
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exit:
|
|
ret void
|
|
}
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|
|
.. image:: ./loop-terminology-guarded-loop.png
|
|
:width: 500 px
|
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|
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The result is a little bit more complicated than we may expect
|
|
because LoopRotate ensures that the loop is in
|
|
:ref:`Loop Simplify Form <loop-terminology-loop-simplify>`
|
|
after rotation.
|
|
In this case, it inserted the %loop.preheader basic block so
|
|
that the loop has a preheader and it introduced the %loop.exit
|
|
basic block so that the loop has dedicated exits
|
|
(otherwise, %exit would be jumped from both %latch and %entry,
|
|
but %entry is not contained in the loop).
|
|
Note that a loop has to be in Loop Simplify Form beforehand
|
|
too for LoopRotate to be applied successfully.
|
|
|
|
The main advantage of this form is that it allows hoisting
|
|
invariant instructions, especially loads, into the preheader.
|
|
That could be done in non-rotated loops as well but with
|
|
some disadvantages. Let's illustrate them with an example:
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: C
|
|
|
|
for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i) {
|
|
auto v = *p;
|
|
use(v);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
We assume that loading from p is invariant and use(v) is some
|
|
statement that uses v.
|
|
If we wanted to execute the load only once we could move it
|
|
"out" of the loop body, resulting in this:
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: C
|
|
|
|
auto v = *p;
|
|
for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i) {
|
|
use(v);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
However, now, in the case that n <= 0, in the initial form,
|
|
the loop body would never execute, and so, the load would
|
|
never execute. This is a problem mainly for semantic reasons.
|
|
Consider the case in which n <= 0 and loading from p is invalid.
|
|
In the initial program there would be no error. However, with this
|
|
transformation we would introduce one, effectively breaking
|
|
the initial semantics.
|
|
|
|
To avoid both of these problems, we can insert a guard:
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: C
|
|
|
|
if (n > 0) { // loop guard
|
|
auto v = *p;
|
|
for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i) {
|
|
use(v);
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
This is certainly better but it could be improved slightly. Notice
|
|
that the check for whether n is bigger than 0 is executed twice (and
|
|
n does not change in between). Once when we check the guard condition
|
|
and once in the first execution of the loop. To avoid that, we could
|
|
do an unconditional first execution and insert the loop condition
|
|
in the end. This effectively means transforming the loop into a do-while loop:
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: C
|
|
|
|
if (0 < n) {
|
|
auto v = *p;
|
|
do {
|
|
use(v);
|
|
++i;
|
|
} while (i < n);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
Note that LoopRotate does not generally do such
|
|
hoisting. Rather, it is an enabling transformation for other
|
|
passes like Loop-Invariant Code Motion (:ref:`-licm <passes-licm>`).
|