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29ffba4b56
This can be seen as a follow up to commit 0ee439b705e82a4fe20e2, that changed the second argument of __powidf2, __powisf2 and __powitf2 in compiler-rt from si_int to int. That was to align with how those runtimes are defined in libgcc. One thing that seem to have been missing in that patch was to make sure that the rest of LLVM also handle that the argument now depends on the size of int (not using the si_int machine mode for 32-bit). When using __builtin_powi for a target with 16-bit int clang crashed. And when emitting libcalls to those rtlib functions, typically when lowering @llvm.powi), the backend would always prepare the exponent argument as an i32 which caused miscompiles when the rtlib was compiled with 16-bit int. The solution used here is to use an overloaded type for the second argument in @llvm.powi. This way clang can use the "correct" type when lowering __builtin_powi, and then later when emitting the libcall it is assumed that the type used in @llvm.powi matches the rtlib function. One thing that needed some extra attention was that when vectorizing calls several passes did not support that several arguments could be overloaded in the intrinsics. This patch allows overload of a scalar operand by adding hasVectorInstrinsicOverloadedScalarOpd, with an entry for powi. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99439
950 lines
37 KiB
C++
950 lines
37 KiB
C++
//===- llvm/Analysis/VectorUtils.h - Vector utilities -----------*- C++ -*-===//
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//
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// Part of the LLVM Project, under the Apache License v2.0 with LLVM Exceptions.
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// See https://llvm.org/LICENSE.txt for license information.
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// SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 WITH LLVM-exception
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//
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//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
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//
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// This file defines some vectorizer utilities.
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//
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//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
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#ifndef LLVM_ANALYSIS_VECTORUTILS_H
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#define LLVM_ANALYSIS_VECTORUTILS_H
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#include "llvm/ADT/MapVector.h"
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#include "llvm/ADT/SmallVector.h"
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#include "llvm/Analysis/LoopAccessAnalysis.h"
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#include "llvm/Support/CheckedArithmetic.h"
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namespace llvm {
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class TargetLibraryInfo;
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/// Describes the type of Parameters
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enum class VFParamKind {
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Vector, // No semantic information.
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OMP_Linear, // declare simd linear(i)
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OMP_LinearRef, // declare simd linear(ref(i))
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OMP_LinearVal, // declare simd linear(val(i))
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OMP_LinearUVal, // declare simd linear(uval(i))
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OMP_LinearPos, // declare simd linear(i:c) uniform(c)
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OMP_LinearValPos, // declare simd linear(val(i:c)) uniform(c)
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OMP_LinearRefPos, // declare simd linear(ref(i:c)) uniform(c)
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OMP_LinearUValPos, // declare simd linear(uval(i:c)) uniform(c
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OMP_Uniform, // declare simd uniform(i)
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GlobalPredicate, // Global logical predicate that acts on all lanes
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// of the input and output mask concurrently. For
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// example, it is implied by the `M` token in the
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// Vector Function ABI mangled name.
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Unknown
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};
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/// Describes the type of Instruction Set Architecture
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enum class VFISAKind {
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AdvancedSIMD, // AArch64 Advanced SIMD (NEON)
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SVE, // AArch64 Scalable Vector Extension
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SSE, // x86 SSE
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AVX, // x86 AVX
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AVX2, // x86 AVX2
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AVX512, // x86 AVX512
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LLVM, // LLVM internal ISA for functions that are not
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// attached to an existing ABI via name mangling.
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Unknown // Unknown ISA
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};
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/// Encapsulates information needed to describe a parameter.
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///
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/// The description of the parameter is not linked directly to
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/// OpenMP or any other vector function description. This structure
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/// is extendible to handle other paradigms that describe vector
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/// functions and their parameters.
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struct VFParameter {
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unsigned ParamPos; // Parameter Position in Scalar Function.
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VFParamKind ParamKind; // Kind of Parameter.
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int LinearStepOrPos = 0; // Step or Position of the Parameter.
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Align Alignment = Align(); // Optional alignment in bytes, defaulted to 1.
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// Comparison operator.
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bool operator==(const VFParameter &Other) const {
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return std::tie(ParamPos, ParamKind, LinearStepOrPos, Alignment) ==
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std::tie(Other.ParamPos, Other.ParamKind, Other.LinearStepOrPos,
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Other.Alignment);
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}
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};
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/// Contains the information about the kind of vectorization
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/// available.
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///
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/// This object in independent on the paradigm used to
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/// represent vector functions. in particular, it is not attached to
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/// any target-specific ABI.
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struct VFShape {
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unsigned VF; // Vectorization factor.
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bool IsScalable; // True if the function is a scalable function.
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SmallVector<VFParameter, 8> Parameters; // List of parameter information.
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// Comparison operator.
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bool operator==(const VFShape &Other) const {
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return std::tie(VF, IsScalable, Parameters) ==
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std::tie(Other.VF, Other.IsScalable, Other.Parameters);
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}
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/// Update the parameter in position P.ParamPos to P.
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void updateParam(VFParameter P) {
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assert(P.ParamPos < Parameters.size() && "Invalid parameter position.");
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Parameters[P.ParamPos] = P;
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assert(hasValidParameterList() && "Invalid parameter list");
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}
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// Retrieve the VFShape that can be used to map a (scalar) function to itself,
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// with VF = 1.
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static VFShape getScalarShape(const CallInst &CI) {
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return VFShape::get(CI, ElementCount::getFixed(1),
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/*HasGlobalPredicate*/ false);
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}
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// Retrieve the basic vectorization shape of the function, where all
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// parameters are mapped to VFParamKind::Vector with \p EC
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// lanes. Specifies whether the function has a Global Predicate
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// argument via \p HasGlobalPred.
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static VFShape get(const CallInst &CI, ElementCount EC, bool HasGlobalPred) {
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SmallVector<VFParameter, 8> Parameters;
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for (unsigned I = 0; I < CI.arg_size(); ++I)
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Parameters.push_back(VFParameter({I, VFParamKind::Vector}));
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if (HasGlobalPred)
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Parameters.push_back(
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VFParameter({CI.arg_size(), VFParamKind::GlobalPredicate}));
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return {EC.getKnownMinValue(), EC.isScalable(), Parameters};
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}
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/// Sanity check on the Parameters in the VFShape.
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bool hasValidParameterList() const;
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};
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/// Holds the VFShape for a specific scalar to vector function mapping.
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struct VFInfo {
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VFShape Shape; /// Classification of the vector function.
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std::string ScalarName; /// Scalar Function Name.
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std::string VectorName; /// Vector Function Name associated to this VFInfo.
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VFISAKind ISA; /// Instruction Set Architecture.
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};
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namespace VFABI {
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/// LLVM Internal VFABI ISA token for vector functions.
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static constexpr char const *_LLVM_ = "_LLVM_";
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/// Prefix for internal name redirection for vector function that
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/// tells the compiler to scalarize the call using the scalar name
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/// of the function. For example, a mangled name like
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/// `_ZGV_LLVM_N2v_foo(_LLVM_Scalarize_foo)` would tell the
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/// vectorizer to vectorize the scalar call `foo`, and to scalarize
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/// it once vectorization is done.
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static constexpr char const *_LLVM_Scalarize_ = "_LLVM_Scalarize_";
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/// Function to construct a VFInfo out of a mangled names in the
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/// following format:
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///
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/// <VFABI_name>{(<redirection>)}
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///
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/// where <VFABI_name> is the name of the vector function, mangled according
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/// to the rules described in the Vector Function ABI of the target vector
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/// extension (or <isa> from now on). The <VFABI_name> is in the following
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/// format:
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///
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/// _ZGV<isa><mask><vlen><parameters>_<scalarname>[(<redirection>)]
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///
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/// This methods support demangling rules for the following <isa>:
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///
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/// * AArch64: https://developer.arm.com/docs/101129/latest
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///
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/// * x86 (libmvec): https://sourceware.org/glibc/wiki/libmvec and
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/// https://sourceware.org/glibc/wiki/libmvec?action=AttachFile&do=view&target=VectorABI.txt
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///
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/// \param MangledName -> input string in the format
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/// _ZGV<isa><mask><vlen><parameters>_<scalarname>[(<redirection>)].
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/// \param M -> Module used to retrieve informations about the vector
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/// function that are not possible to retrieve from the mangled
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/// name. At the moment, this parameter is needed only to retrieve the
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/// Vectorization Factor of scalable vector functions from their
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/// respective IR declarations.
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Optional<VFInfo> tryDemangleForVFABI(StringRef MangledName, const Module &M);
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/// This routine mangles the given VectorName according to the LangRef
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/// specification for vector-function-abi-variant attribute and is specific to
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/// the TLI mappings. It is the responsibility of the caller to make sure that
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/// this is only used if all parameters in the vector function are vector type.
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/// This returned string holds scalar-to-vector mapping:
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/// _ZGV<isa><mask><vlen><vparams>_<scalarname>(<vectorname>)
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///
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/// where:
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///
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/// <isa> = "_LLVM_"
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/// <mask> = "N". Note: TLI does not support masked interfaces.
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/// <vlen> = Number of concurrent lanes, stored in the `VectorizationFactor`
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/// field of the `VecDesc` struct. If the number of lanes is scalable
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/// then 'x' is printed instead.
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/// <vparams> = "v", as many as are the numArgs.
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/// <scalarname> = the name of the scalar function.
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/// <vectorname> = the name of the vector function.
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std::string mangleTLIVectorName(StringRef VectorName, StringRef ScalarName,
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unsigned numArgs, ElementCount VF);
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/// Retrieve the `VFParamKind` from a string token.
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VFParamKind getVFParamKindFromString(const StringRef Token);
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// Name of the attribute where the variant mappings are stored.
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static constexpr char const *MappingsAttrName = "vector-function-abi-variant";
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/// Populates a set of strings representing the Vector Function ABI variants
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/// associated to the CallInst CI. If the CI does not contain the
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/// vector-function-abi-variant attribute, we return without populating
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/// VariantMappings, i.e. callers of getVectorVariantNames need not check for
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/// the presence of the attribute (see InjectTLIMappings).
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void getVectorVariantNames(const CallInst &CI,
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SmallVectorImpl<std::string> &VariantMappings);
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} // end namespace VFABI
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/// The Vector Function Database.
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///
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/// Helper class used to find the vector functions associated to a
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/// scalar CallInst.
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class VFDatabase {
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/// The Module of the CallInst CI.
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const Module *M;
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/// The CallInst instance being queried for scalar to vector mappings.
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const CallInst &CI;
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/// List of vector functions descriptors associated to the call
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/// instruction.
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const SmallVector<VFInfo, 8> ScalarToVectorMappings;
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/// Retrieve the scalar-to-vector mappings associated to the rule of
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/// a vector Function ABI.
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static void getVFABIMappings(const CallInst &CI,
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SmallVectorImpl<VFInfo> &Mappings) {
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if (!CI.getCalledFunction())
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return;
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const StringRef ScalarName = CI.getCalledFunction()->getName();
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SmallVector<std::string, 8> ListOfStrings;
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// The check for the vector-function-abi-variant attribute is done when
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// retrieving the vector variant names here.
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VFABI::getVectorVariantNames(CI, ListOfStrings);
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if (ListOfStrings.empty())
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return;
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for (const auto &MangledName : ListOfStrings) {
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const Optional<VFInfo> Shape =
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VFABI::tryDemangleForVFABI(MangledName, *(CI.getModule()));
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// A match is found via scalar and vector names, and also by
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// ensuring that the variant described in the attribute has a
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// corresponding definition or declaration of the vector
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// function in the Module M.
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if (Shape.hasValue() && (Shape.getValue().ScalarName == ScalarName)) {
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assert(CI.getModule()->getFunction(Shape.getValue().VectorName) &&
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"Vector function is missing.");
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Mappings.push_back(Shape.getValue());
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}
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}
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}
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public:
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/// Retrieve all the VFInfo instances associated to the CallInst CI.
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static SmallVector<VFInfo, 8> getMappings(const CallInst &CI) {
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SmallVector<VFInfo, 8> Ret;
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// Get mappings from the Vector Function ABI variants.
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getVFABIMappings(CI, Ret);
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// Other non-VFABI variants should be retrieved here.
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return Ret;
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}
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/// Constructor, requires a CallInst instance.
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VFDatabase(CallInst &CI)
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: M(CI.getModule()), CI(CI),
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ScalarToVectorMappings(VFDatabase::getMappings(CI)) {}
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/// \defgroup VFDatabase query interface.
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///
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/// @{
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/// Retrieve the Function with VFShape \p Shape.
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Function *getVectorizedFunction(const VFShape &Shape) const {
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if (Shape == VFShape::getScalarShape(CI))
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return CI.getCalledFunction();
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for (const auto &Info : ScalarToVectorMappings)
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if (Info.Shape == Shape)
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return M->getFunction(Info.VectorName);
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return nullptr;
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}
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/// @}
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};
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template <typename T> class ArrayRef;
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class DemandedBits;
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class GetElementPtrInst;
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template <typename InstTy> class InterleaveGroup;
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class IRBuilderBase;
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class Loop;
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class ScalarEvolution;
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class TargetTransformInfo;
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class Type;
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class Value;
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namespace Intrinsic {
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typedef unsigned ID;
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}
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/// A helper function for converting Scalar types to vector types. If
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/// the incoming type is void, we return void. If the EC represents a
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/// scalar, we return the scalar type.
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inline Type *ToVectorTy(Type *Scalar, ElementCount EC) {
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if (Scalar->isVoidTy() || Scalar->isMetadataTy() || EC.isScalar())
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return Scalar;
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return VectorType::get(Scalar, EC);
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}
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inline Type *ToVectorTy(Type *Scalar, unsigned VF) {
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return ToVectorTy(Scalar, ElementCount::getFixed(VF));
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}
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/// Identify if the intrinsic is trivially vectorizable.
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/// This method returns true if the intrinsic's argument types are all scalars
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/// for the scalar form of the intrinsic and all vectors (or scalars handled by
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/// hasVectorInstrinsicScalarOpd) for the vector form of the intrinsic.
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bool isTriviallyVectorizable(Intrinsic::ID ID);
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/// Identifies if the vector form of the intrinsic has a scalar operand.
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bool hasVectorInstrinsicScalarOpd(Intrinsic::ID ID, unsigned ScalarOpdIdx);
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/// Identifies if the vector form of the intrinsic has a scalar operand that has
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/// an overloaded type.
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bool hasVectorInstrinsicOverloadedScalarOpd(Intrinsic::ID ID,
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unsigned ScalarOpdIdx);
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/// Returns intrinsic ID for call.
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/// For the input call instruction it finds mapping intrinsic and returns
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/// its intrinsic ID, in case it does not found it return not_intrinsic.
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Intrinsic::ID getVectorIntrinsicIDForCall(const CallInst *CI,
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const TargetLibraryInfo *TLI);
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/// Find the operand of the GEP that should be checked for consecutive
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/// stores. This ignores trailing indices that have no effect on the final
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/// pointer.
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unsigned getGEPInductionOperand(const GetElementPtrInst *Gep);
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/// If the argument is a GEP, then returns the operand identified by
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/// getGEPInductionOperand. However, if there is some other non-loop-invariant
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/// operand, it returns that instead.
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Value *stripGetElementPtr(Value *Ptr, ScalarEvolution *SE, Loop *Lp);
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/// If a value has only one user that is a CastInst, return it.
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Value *getUniqueCastUse(Value *Ptr, Loop *Lp, Type *Ty);
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/// Get the stride of a pointer access in a loop. Looks for symbolic
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/// strides "a[i*stride]". Returns the symbolic stride, or null otherwise.
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Value *getStrideFromPointer(Value *Ptr, ScalarEvolution *SE, Loop *Lp);
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/// Given a vector and an element number, see if the scalar value is
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/// already around as a register, for example if it were inserted then extracted
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/// from the vector.
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Value *findScalarElement(Value *V, unsigned EltNo);
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/// If all non-negative \p Mask elements are the same value, return that value.
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/// If all elements are negative (undefined) or \p Mask contains different
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/// non-negative values, return -1.
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int getSplatIndex(ArrayRef<int> Mask);
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/// Get splat value if the input is a splat vector or return nullptr.
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/// The value may be extracted from a splat constants vector or from
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/// a sequence of instructions that broadcast a single value into a vector.
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Value *getSplatValue(const Value *V);
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/// Return true if each element of the vector value \p V is poisoned or equal to
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/// every other non-poisoned element. If an index element is specified, either
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/// every element of the vector is poisoned or the element at that index is not
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/// poisoned and equal to every other non-poisoned element.
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/// This may be more powerful than the related getSplatValue() because it is
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/// not limited by finding a scalar source value to a splatted vector.
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bool isSplatValue(const Value *V, int Index = -1, unsigned Depth = 0);
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/// Replace each shuffle mask index with the scaled sequential indices for an
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/// equivalent mask of narrowed elements. Mask elements that are less than 0
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/// (sentinel values) are repeated in the output mask.
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///
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/// Example with Scale = 4:
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/// <4 x i32> <3, 2, 0, -1> -->
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/// <16 x i8> <12, 13, 14, 15, 8, 9, 10, 11, 0, 1, 2, 3, -1, -1, -1, -1>
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///
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/// This is the reverse process of widening shuffle mask elements, but it always
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/// succeeds because the indexes can always be multiplied (scaled up) to map to
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/// narrower vector elements.
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void narrowShuffleMaskElts(int Scale, ArrayRef<int> Mask,
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SmallVectorImpl<int> &ScaledMask);
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/// Try to transform a shuffle mask by replacing elements with the scaled index
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/// for an equivalent mask of widened elements. If all mask elements that would
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/// map to a wider element of the new mask are the same negative number
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/// (sentinel value), that element of the new mask is the same value. If any
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/// element in a given slice is negative and some other element in that slice is
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/// not the same value, return false (partial matches with sentinel values are
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/// not allowed).
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///
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/// Example with Scale = 4:
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/// <16 x i8> <12, 13, 14, 15, 8, 9, 10, 11, 0, 1, 2, 3, -1, -1, -1, -1> -->
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/// <4 x i32> <3, 2, 0, -1>
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///
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/// This is the reverse process of narrowing shuffle mask elements if it
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/// succeeds. This transform is not always possible because indexes may not
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/// divide evenly (scale down) to map to wider vector elements.
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bool widenShuffleMaskElts(int Scale, ArrayRef<int> Mask,
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SmallVectorImpl<int> &ScaledMask);
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/// Compute a map of integer instructions to their minimum legal type
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/// size.
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///
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/// C semantics force sub-int-sized values (e.g. i8, i16) to be promoted to int
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/// type (e.g. i32) whenever arithmetic is performed on them.
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///
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/// For targets with native i8 or i16 operations, usually InstCombine can shrink
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/// the arithmetic type down again. However InstCombine refuses to create
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/// illegal types, so for targets without i8 or i16 registers, the lengthening
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/// and shrinking remains.
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///
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/// Most SIMD ISAs (e.g. NEON) however support vectors of i8 or i16 even when
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/// their scalar equivalents do not, so during vectorization it is important to
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/// remove these lengthens and truncates when deciding the profitability of
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/// vectorization.
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///
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/// This function analyzes the given range of instructions and determines the
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/// minimum type size each can be converted to. It attempts to remove or
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/// minimize type size changes across each def-use chain, so for example in the
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/// following code:
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///
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/// %1 = load i8, i8*
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/// %2 = add i8 %1, 2
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/// %3 = load i16, i16*
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/// %4 = zext i8 %2 to i32
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/// %5 = zext i16 %3 to i32
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/// %6 = add i32 %4, %5
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/// %7 = trunc i32 %6 to i16
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///
|
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/// Instruction %6 must be done at least in i16, so computeMinimumValueSizes
|
|
/// will return: {%1: 16, %2: 16, %3: 16, %4: 16, %5: 16, %6: 16, %7: 16}.
|
|
///
|
|
/// If the optional TargetTransformInfo is provided, this function tries harder
|
|
/// to do less work by only looking at illegal types.
|
|
MapVector<Instruction*, uint64_t>
|
|
computeMinimumValueSizes(ArrayRef<BasicBlock*> Blocks,
|
|
DemandedBits &DB,
|
|
const TargetTransformInfo *TTI=nullptr);
|
|
|
|
/// Compute the union of two access-group lists.
|
|
///
|
|
/// If the list contains just one access group, it is returned directly. If the
|
|
/// list is empty, returns nullptr.
|
|
MDNode *uniteAccessGroups(MDNode *AccGroups1, MDNode *AccGroups2);
|
|
|
|
/// Compute the access-group list of access groups that @p Inst1 and @p Inst2
|
|
/// are both in. If either instruction does not access memory at all, it is
|
|
/// considered to be in every list.
|
|
///
|
|
/// If the list contains just one access group, it is returned directly. If the
|
|
/// list is empty, returns nullptr.
|
|
MDNode *intersectAccessGroups(const Instruction *Inst1,
|
|
const Instruction *Inst2);
|
|
|
|
/// Specifically, let Kinds = [MD_tbaa, MD_alias_scope, MD_noalias, MD_fpmath,
|
|
/// MD_nontemporal, MD_access_group].
|
|
/// For K in Kinds, we get the MDNode for K from each of the
|
|
/// elements of VL, compute their "intersection" (i.e., the most generic
|
|
/// metadata value that covers all of the individual values), and set I's
|
|
/// metadata for M equal to the intersection value.
|
|
///
|
|
/// This function always sets a (possibly null) value for each K in Kinds.
|
|
Instruction *propagateMetadata(Instruction *I, ArrayRef<Value *> VL);
|
|
|
|
/// Create a mask that filters the members of an interleave group where there
|
|
/// are gaps.
|
|
///
|
|
/// For example, the mask for \p Group with interleave-factor 3
|
|
/// and \p VF 4, that has only its first member present is:
|
|
///
|
|
/// <1,0,0,1,0,0,1,0,0,1,0,0>
|
|
///
|
|
/// Note: The result is a mask of 0's and 1's, as opposed to the other
|
|
/// create[*]Mask() utilities which create a shuffle mask (mask that
|
|
/// consists of indices).
|
|
Constant *createBitMaskForGaps(IRBuilderBase &Builder, unsigned VF,
|
|
const InterleaveGroup<Instruction> &Group);
|
|
|
|
/// Create a mask with replicated elements.
|
|
///
|
|
/// This function creates a shuffle mask for replicating each of the \p VF
|
|
/// elements in a vector \p ReplicationFactor times. It can be used to
|
|
/// transform a mask of \p VF elements into a mask of
|
|
/// \p VF * \p ReplicationFactor elements used by a predicated
|
|
/// interleaved-group of loads/stores whose Interleaved-factor ==
|
|
/// \p ReplicationFactor.
|
|
///
|
|
/// For example, the mask for \p ReplicationFactor=3 and \p VF=4 is:
|
|
///
|
|
/// <0,0,0,1,1,1,2,2,2,3,3,3>
|
|
llvm::SmallVector<int, 16> createReplicatedMask(unsigned ReplicationFactor,
|
|
unsigned VF);
|
|
|
|
/// Create an interleave shuffle mask.
|
|
///
|
|
/// This function creates a shuffle mask for interleaving \p NumVecs vectors of
|
|
/// vectorization factor \p VF into a single wide vector. The mask is of the
|
|
/// form:
|
|
///
|
|
/// <0, VF, VF * 2, ..., VF * (NumVecs - 1), 1, VF + 1, VF * 2 + 1, ...>
|
|
///
|
|
/// For example, the mask for VF = 4 and NumVecs = 2 is:
|
|
///
|
|
/// <0, 4, 1, 5, 2, 6, 3, 7>.
|
|
llvm::SmallVector<int, 16> createInterleaveMask(unsigned VF, unsigned NumVecs);
|
|
|
|
/// Create a stride shuffle mask.
|
|
///
|
|
/// This function creates a shuffle mask whose elements begin at \p Start and
|
|
/// are incremented by \p Stride. The mask can be used to deinterleave an
|
|
/// interleaved vector into separate vectors of vectorization factor \p VF. The
|
|
/// mask is of the form:
|
|
///
|
|
/// <Start, Start + Stride, ..., Start + Stride * (VF - 1)>
|
|
///
|
|
/// For example, the mask for Start = 0, Stride = 2, and VF = 4 is:
|
|
///
|
|
/// <0, 2, 4, 6>
|
|
llvm::SmallVector<int, 16> createStrideMask(unsigned Start, unsigned Stride,
|
|
unsigned VF);
|
|
|
|
/// Create a sequential shuffle mask.
|
|
///
|
|
/// This function creates shuffle mask whose elements are sequential and begin
|
|
/// at \p Start. The mask contains \p NumInts integers and is padded with \p
|
|
/// NumUndefs undef values. The mask is of the form:
|
|
///
|
|
/// <Start, Start + 1, ... Start + NumInts - 1, undef_1, ... undef_NumUndefs>
|
|
///
|
|
/// For example, the mask for Start = 0, NumInsts = 4, and NumUndefs = 4 is:
|
|
///
|
|
/// <0, 1, 2, 3, undef, undef, undef, undef>
|
|
llvm::SmallVector<int, 16>
|
|
createSequentialMask(unsigned Start, unsigned NumInts, unsigned NumUndefs);
|
|
|
|
/// Concatenate a list of vectors.
|
|
///
|
|
/// This function generates code that concatenate the vectors in \p Vecs into a
|
|
/// single large vector. The number of vectors should be greater than one, and
|
|
/// their element types should be the same. The number of elements in the
|
|
/// vectors should also be the same; however, if the last vector has fewer
|
|
/// elements, it will be padded with undefs.
|
|
Value *concatenateVectors(IRBuilderBase &Builder, ArrayRef<Value *> Vecs);
|
|
|
|
/// Given a mask vector of i1, Return true if all of the elements of this
|
|
/// predicate mask are known to be false or undef. That is, return true if all
|
|
/// lanes can be assumed inactive.
|
|
bool maskIsAllZeroOrUndef(Value *Mask);
|
|
|
|
/// Given a mask vector of i1, Return true if all of the elements of this
|
|
/// predicate mask are known to be true or undef. That is, return true if all
|
|
/// lanes can be assumed active.
|
|
bool maskIsAllOneOrUndef(Value *Mask);
|
|
|
|
/// Given a mask vector of the form <Y x i1>, return an APInt (of bitwidth Y)
|
|
/// for each lane which may be active.
|
|
APInt possiblyDemandedEltsInMask(Value *Mask);
|
|
|
|
/// The group of interleaved loads/stores sharing the same stride and
|
|
/// close to each other.
|
|
///
|
|
/// Each member in this group has an index starting from 0, and the largest
|
|
/// index should be less than interleaved factor, which is equal to the absolute
|
|
/// value of the access's stride.
|
|
///
|
|
/// E.g. An interleaved load group of factor 4:
|
|
/// for (unsigned i = 0; i < 1024; i+=4) {
|
|
/// a = A[i]; // Member of index 0
|
|
/// b = A[i+1]; // Member of index 1
|
|
/// d = A[i+3]; // Member of index 3
|
|
/// ...
|
|
/// }
|
|
///
|
|
/// An interleaved store group of factor 4:
|
|
/// for (unsigned i = 0; i < 1024; i+=4) {
|
|
/// ...
|
|
/// A[i] = a; // Member of index 0
|
|
/// A[i+1] = b; // Member of index 1
|
|
/// A[i+2] = c; // Member of index 2
|
|
/// A[i+3] = d; // Member of index 3
|
|
/// }
|
|
///
|
|
/// Note: the interleaved load group could have gaps (missing members), but
|
|
/// the interleaved store group doesn't allow gaps.
|
|
template <typename InstTy> class InterleaveGroup {
|
|
public:
|
|
InterleaveGroup(uint32_t Factor, bool Reverse, Align Alignment)
|
|
: Factor(Factor), Reverse(Reverse), Alignment(Alignment),
|
|
InsertPos(nullptr) {}
|
|
|
|
InterleaveGroup(InstTy *Instr, int32_t Stride, Align Alignment)
|
|
: Alignment(Alignment), InsertPos(Instr) {
|
|
Factor = std::abs(Stride);
|
|
assert(Factor > 1 && "Invalid interleave factor");
|
|
|
|
Reverse = Stride < 0;
|
|
Members[0] = Instr;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
bool isReverse() const { return Reverse; }
|
|
uint32_t getFactor() const { return Factor; }
|
|
Align getAlign() const { return Alignment; }
|
|
uint32_t getNumMembers() const { return Members.size(); }
|
|
|
|
/// Try to insert a new member \p Instr with index \p Index and
|
|
/// alignment \p NewAlign. The index is related to the leader and it could be
|
|
/// negative if it is the new leader.
|
|
///
|
|
/// \returns false if the instruction doesn't belong to the group.
|
|
bool insertMember(InstTy *Instr, int32_t Index, Align NewAlign) {
|
|
// Make sure the key fits in an int32_t.
|
|
Optional<int32_t> MaybeKey = checkedAdd(Index, SmallestKey);
|
|
if (!MaybeKey)
|
|
return false;
|
|
int32_t Key = *MaybeKey;
|
|
|
|
// Skip if the key is used for either the tombstone or empty special values.
|
|
if (DenseMapInfo<int32_t>::getTombstoneKey() == Key ||
|
|
DenseMapInfo<int32_t>::getEmptyKey() == Key)
|
|
return false;
|
|
|
|
// Skip if there is already a member with the same index.
|
|
if (Members.find(Key) != Members.end())
|
|
return false;
|
|
|
|
if (Key > LargestKey) {
|
|
// The largest index is always less than the interleave factor.
|
|
if (Index >= static_cast<int32_t>(Factor))
|
|
return false;
|
|
|
|
LargestKey = Key;
|
|
} else if (Key < SmallestKey) {
|
|
|
|
// Make sure the largest index fits in an int32_t.
|
|
Optional<int32_t> MaybeLargestIndex = checkedSub(LargestKey, Key);
|
|
if (!MaybeLargestIndex)
|
|
return false;
|
|
|
|
// The largest index is always less than the interleave factor.
|
|
if (*MaybeLargestIndex >= static_cast<int64_t>(Factor))
|
|
return false;
|
|
|
|
SmallestKey = Key;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// It's always safe to select the minimum alignment.
|
|
Alignment = std::min(Alignment, NewAlign);
|
|
Members[Key] = Instr;
|
|
return true;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// Get the member with the given index \p Index
|
|
///
|
|
/// \returns nullptr if contains no such member.
|
|
InstTy *getMember(uint32_t Index) const {
|
|
int32_t Key = SmallestKey + Index;
|
|
return Members.lookup(Key);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// Get the index for the given member. Unlike the key in the member
|
|
/// map, the index starts from 0.
|
|
uint32_t getIndex(const InstTy *Instr) const {
|
|
for (auto I : Members) {
|
|
if (I.second == Instr)
|
|
return I.first - SmallestKey;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
llvm_unreachable("InterleaveGroup contains no such member");
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
InstTy *getInsertPos() const { return InsertPos; }
|
|
void setInsertPos(InstTy *Inst) { InsertPos = Inst; }
|
|
|
|
/// Add metadata (e.g. alias info) from the instructions in this group to \p
|
|
/// NewInst.
|
|
///
|
|
/// FIXME: this function currently does not add noalias metadata a'la
|
|
/// addNewMedata. To do that we need to compute the intersection of the
|
|
/// noalias info from all members.
|
|
void addMetadata(InstTy *NewInst) const;
|
|
|
|
/// Returns true if this Group requires a scalar iteration to handle gaps.
|
|
bool requiresScalarEpilogue() const {
|
|
// If the last member of the Group exists, then a scalar epilog is not
|
|
// needed for this group.
|
|
if (getMember(getFactor() - 1))
|
|
return false;
|
|
|
|
// We have a group with gaps. It therefore cannot be a group of stores,
|
|
// and it can't be a reversed access, because such groups get invalidated.
|
|
assert(!getMember(0)->mayWriteToMemory() &&
|
|
"Group should have been invalidated");
|
|
assert(!isReverse() && "Group should have been invalidated");
|
|
|
|
// This is a group of loads, with gaps, and without a last-member
|
|
return true;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
private:
|
|
uint32_t Factor; // Interleave Factor.
|
|
bool Reverse;
|
|
Align Alignment;
|
|
DenseMap<int32_t, InstTy *> Members;
|
|
int32_t SmallestKey = 0;
|
|
int32_t LargestKey = 0;
|
|
|
|
// To avoid breaking dependences, vectorized instructions of an interleave
|
|
// group should be inserted at either the first load or the last store in
|
|
// program order.
|
|
//
|
|
// E.g. %even = load i32 // Insert Position
|
|
// %add = add i32 %even // Use of %even
|
|
// %odd = load i32
|
|
//
|
|
// store i32 %even
|
|
// %odd = add i32 // Def of %odd
|
|
// store i32 %odd // Insert Position
|
|
InstTy *InsertPos;
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
/// Drive the analysis of interleaved memory accesses in the loop.
|
|
///
|
|
/// Use this class to analyze interleaved accesses only when we can vectorize
|
|
/// a loop. Otherwise it's meaningless to do analysis as the vectorization
|
|
/// on interleaved accesses is unsafe.
|
|
///
|
|
/// The analysis collects interleave groups and records the relationships
|
|
/// between the member and the group in a map.
|
|
class InterleavedAccessInfo {
|
|
public:
|
|
InterleavedAccessInfo(PredicatedScalarEvolution &PSE, Loop *L,
|
|
DominatorTree *DT, LoopInfo *LI,
|
|
const LoopAccessInfo *LAI)
|
|
: PSE(PSE), TheLoop(L), DT(DT), LI(LI), LAI(LAI) {}
|
|
|
|
~InterleavedAccessInfo() { invalidateGroups(); }
|
|
|
|
/// Analyze the interleaved accesses and collect them in interleave
|
|
/// groups. Substitute symbolic strides using \p Strides.
|
|
/// Consider also predicated loads/stores in the analysis if
|
|
/// \p EnableMaskedInterleavedGroup is true.
|
|
void analyzeInterleaving(bool EnableMaskedInterleavedGroup);
|
|
|
|
/// Invalidate groups, e.g., in case all blocks in loop will be predicated
|
|
/// contrary to original assumption. Although we currently prevent group
|
|
/// formation for predicated accesses, we may be able to relax this limitation
|
|
/// in the future once we handle more complicated blocks. Returns true if any
|
|
/// groups were invalidated.
|
|
bool invalidateGroups() {
|
|
if (InterleaveGroups.empty()) {
|
|
assert(
|
|
!RequiresScalarEpilogue &&
|
|
"RequiresScalarEpilog should not be set without interleave groups");
|
|
return false;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
InterleaveGroupMap.clear();
|
|
for (auto *Ptr : InterleaveGroups)
|
|
delete Ptr;
|
|
InterleaveGroups.clear();
|
|
RequiresScalarEpilogue = false;
|
|
return true;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// Check if \p Instr belongs to any interleave group.
|
|
bool isInterleaved(Instruction *Instr) const {
|
|
return InterleaveGroupMap.find(Instr) != InterleaveGroupMap.end();
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// Get the interleave group that \p Instr belongs to.
|
|
///
|
|
/// \returns nullptr if doesn't have such group.
|
|
InterleaveGroup<Instruction> *
|
|
getInterleaveGroup(const Instruction *Instr) const {
|
|
return InterleaveGroupMap.lookup(Instr);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
iterator_range<SmallPtrSetIterator<llvm::InterleaveGroup<Instruction> *>>
|
|
getInterleaveGroups() {
|
|
return make_range(InterleaveGroups.begin(), InterleaveGroups.end());
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// Returns true if an interleaved group that may access memory
|
|
/// out-of-bounds requires a scalar epilogue iteration for correctness.
|
|
bool requiresScalarEpilogue() const { return RequiresScalarEpilogue; }
|
|
|
|
/// Invalidate groups that require a scalar epilogue (due to gaps). This can
|
|
/// happen when optimizing for size forbids a scalar epilogue, and the gap
|
|
/// cannot be filtered by masking the load/store.
|
|
void invalidateGroupsRequiringScalarEpilogue();
|
|
|
|
private:
|
|
/// A wrapper around ScalarEvolution, used to add runtime SCEV checks.
|
|
/// Simplifies SCEV expressions in the context of existing SCEV assumptions.
|
|
/// The interleaved access analysis can also add new predicates (for example
|
|
/// by versioning strides of pointers).
|
|
PredicatedScalarEvolution &PSE;
|
|
|
|
Loop *TheLoop;
|
|
DominatorTree *DT;
|
|
LoopInfo *LI;
|
|
const LoopAccessInfo *LAI;
|
|
|
|
/// True if the loop may contain non-reversed interleaved groups with
|
|
/// out-of-bounds accesses. We ensure we don't speculatively access memory
|
|
/// out-of-bounds by executing at least one scalar epilogue iteration.
|
|
bool RequiresScalarEpilogue = false;
|
|
|
|
/// Holds the relationships between the members and the interleave group.
|
|
DenseMap<Instruction *, InterleaveGroup<Instruction> *> InterleaveGroupMap;
|
|
|
|
SmallPtrSet<InterleaveGroup<Instruction> *, 4> InterleaveGroups;
|
|
|
|
/// Holds dependences among the memory accesses in the loop. It maps a source
|
|
/// access to a set of dependent sink accesses.
|
|
DenseMap<Instruction *, SmallPtrSet<Instruction *, 2>> Dependences;
|
|
|
|
/// The descriptor for a strided memory access.
|
|
struct StrideDescriptor {
|
|
StrideDescriptor() = default;
|
|
StrideDescriptor(int64_t Stride, const SCEV *Scev, uint64_t Size,
|
|
Align Alignment)
|
|
: Stride(Stride), Scev(Scev), Size(Size), Alignment(Alignment) {}
|
|
|
|
// The access's stride. It is negative for a reverse access.
|
|
int64_t Stride = 0;
|
|
|
|
// The scalar expression of this access.
|
|
const SCEV *Scev = nullptr;
|
|
|
|
// The size of the memory object.
|
|
uint64_t Size = 0;
|
|
|
|
// The alignment of this access.
|
|
Align Alignment;
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
/// A type for holding instructions and their stride descriptors.
|
|
using StrideEntry = std::pair<Instruction *, StrideDescriptor>;
|
|
|
|
/// Create a new interleave group with the given instruction \p Instr,
|
|
/// stride \p Stride and alignment \p Align.
|
|
///
|
|
/// \returns the newly created interleave group.
|
|
InterleaveGroup<Instruction> *
|
|
createInterleaveGroup(Instruction *Instr, int Stride, Align Alignment) {
|
|
assert(!InterleaveGroupMap.count(Instr) &&
|
|
"Already in an interleaved access group");
|
|
InterleaveGroupMap[Instr] =
|
|
new InterleaveGroup<Instruction>(Instr, Stride, Alignment);
|
|
InterleaveGroups.insert(InterleaveGroupMap[Instr]);
|
|
return InterleaveGroupMap[Instr];
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// Release the group and remove all the relationships.
|
|
void releaseGroup(InterleaveGroup<Instruction> *Group) {
|
|
for (unsigned i = 0; i < Group->getFactor(); i++)
|
|
if (Instruction *Member = Group->getMember(i))
|
|
InterleaveGroupMap.erase(Member);
|
|
|
|
InterleaveGroups.erase(Group);
|
|
delete Group;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// Collect all the accesses with a constant stride in program order.
|
|
void collectConstStrideAccesses(
|
|
MapVector<Instruction *, StrideDescriptor> &AccessStrideInfo,
|
|
const ValueToValueMap &Strides);
|
|
|
|
/// Returns true if \p Stride is allowed in an interleaved group.
|
|
static bool isStrided(int Stride);
|
|
|
|
/// Returns true if \p BB is a predicated block.
|
|
bool isPredicated(BasicBlock *BB) const {
|
|
return LoopAccessInfo::blockNeedsPredication(BB, TheLoop, DT);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// Returns true if LoopAccessInfo can be used for dependence queries.
|
|
bool areDependencesValid() const {
|
|
return LAI && LAI->getDepChecker().getDependences();
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// Returns true if memory accesses \p A and \p B can be reordered, if
|
|
/// necessary, when constructing interleaved groups.
|
|
///
|
|
/// \p A must precede \p B in program order. We return false if reordering is
|
|
/// not necessary or is prevented because \p A and \p B may be dependent.
|
|
bool canReorderMemAccessesForInterleavedGroups(StrideEntry *A,
|
|
StrideEntry *B) const {
|
|
// Code motion for interleaved accesses can potentially hoist strided loads
|
|
// and sink strided stores. The code below checks the legality of the
|
|
// following two conditions:
|
|
//
|
|
// 1. Potentially moving a strided load (B) before any store (A) that
|
|
// precedes B, or
|
|
//
|
|
// 2. Potentially moving a strided store (A) after any load or store (B)
|
|
// that A precedes.
|
|
//
|
|
// It's legal to reorder A and B if we know there isn't a dependence from A
|
|
// to B. Note that this determination is conservative since some
|
|
// dependences could potentially be reordered safely.
|
|
|
|
// A is potentially the source of a dependence.
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|
auto *Src = A->first;
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auto SrcDes = A->second;
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|
|
|
// B is potentially the sink of a dependence.
|
|
auto *Sink = B->first;
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|
auto SinkDes = B->second;
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|
|
|
// Code motion for interleaved accesses can't violate WAR dependences.
|
|
// Thus, reordering is legal if the source isn't a write.
|
|
if (!Src->mayWriteToMemory())
|
|
return true;
|
|
|
|
// At least one of the accesses must be strided.
|
|
if (!isStrided(SrcDes.Stride) && !isStrided(SinkDes.Stride))
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|
return true;
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|
|
|
// If dependence information is not available from LoopAccessInfo,
|
|
// conservatively assume the instructions can't be reordered.
|
|
if (!areDependencesValid())
|
|
return false;
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|
|
|
// If we know there is a dependence from source to sink, assume the
|
|
// instructions can't be reordered. Otherwise, reordering is legal.
|
|
return Dependences.find(Src) == Dependences.end() ||
|
|
!Dependences.lookup(Src).count(Sink);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// Collect the dependences from LoopAccessInfo.
|
|
///
|
|
/// We process the dependences once during the interleaved access analysis to
|
|
/// enable constant-time dependence queries.
|
|
void collectDependences() {
|
|
if (!areDependencesValid())
|
|
return;
|
|
auto *Deps = LAI->getDepChecker().getDependences();
|
|
for (auto Dep : *Deps)
|
|
Dependences[Dep.getSource(*LAI)].insert(Dep.getDestination(*LAI));
|
|
}
|
|
};
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|
|
|
} // llvm namespace
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|
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#endif
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