The "invariant.load" metadata indicates the memory unit being accessed is immutable.
A load annotated with this metadata can be moved across any store.
As I am not sure if it is legal to move such loads across barrier/fence, this
change dose not allow such transformation.
rdar://11311484
Thank Arnold for code review.
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into their new header subdirectory: include/llvm/IR. This matches the
directory structure of lib, and begins to correct a long standing point
of file layout clutter in LLVM.
There are still more header files to move here, but I wanted to handle
them in separate commits to make tracking what files make sense at each
layer easier.
The only really questionable files here are the target intrinsic
tablegen files. But that's a battle I'd rather not fight today.
I've updated both CMake and Makefile build systems (I think, and my
tests think, but I may have missed something).
I've also re-sorted the includes throughout the project. I'll be
committing updates to Clang, DragonEgg, and Polly momentarily.
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AKA: Recompile *ALL* the source code!
This one went much better. No manual edits here. I spot-checked for
silliness and grep-checked for really broken edits and everything seemed
good. It all still compiles. Yell if you see something that looks goofy.
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so that it can be reused in MemCpyOptimizer. This analysis is needed to remove
an unnecessary memcpy when returning a struct into a local variable.
rdar://11341081
PR12686
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and stores capture) to permit the caller to see each capture point and decide
whether to continue looking.
Use this inside memdep to do an analysis that basicaa won't do. This lets us
solve another devirtualization case, fixing PR8908!
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wider load would allow elimination of subsequent loads, and when the wider
load is still a native integer type. This eliminates a ton of loads on
various benchmarks involving struct fields, though it is somewhat hobbled
by clang not being very aggressive about field alignment.
This is yet another step along the way towards resolving PR6627.
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return it as a clobber. This allows GVN to do smart things.
Enhance GVN to be smart about the case when a small load is clobbered
by a larger overlapping load. In this case, forward the value. This
allows us to compile stuff like this:
int test(void *P) {
int tmp = *(unsigned int*)P;
return tmp+*((unsigned char*)P+1);
}
into:
_test: ## @test
movl (%rdi), %ecx
movzbl %ch, %eax
addl %ecx, %eax
ret
which has one load. We already handled the case where the smaller
load was from a must-aliased base pointer.
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about pairs of AA::Location's instead of looking for MemDep's
"Def" predicate. This is more powerful and general, handling
memset/memcpy/store all uniformly, and implementing PR8701 and
probably obsoleting parts of memcpyoptimizer.
This also fixes an obscure bug with init.trampoline and i8
stores, but I'm not surprised it hasn't been hit yet. Enhancing
init.trampoline to carry the size that it stores would allow
DSE to be much more aggressive about optimizing them.
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references. For example, this allows gvn to eliminate the load in
this example:
void foo(int n, int* p, int *q) {
p[0] = 0;
p[1] = 1;
if (n) {
*q = p[0];
}
}
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indivudal members holding the same data, to clarify the relationship
between NonLocalDepResult and NonLocalDepEntry.
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instead of stored. This reduces memdep memory usage, and also eliminates a bunch of
weakvh's. This speeds up gvn on gcc.c-torture/20001226-1.c from 23.9s to 8.45s (2.8x)
on a different machine than earlier.
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phi translation of complex expressions like &A[i+1]. This has the
following benefits:
1. The phi translation logic is all contained in its own class with
a strong interface and verification that it is self consistent.
2. The logic is more correct than before. Previously, if intermediate
expressions got PHI translated, we'd miss the update and scan for
the wrong pointers in predecessor blocks. @phi_trans2 is a testcase
for this.
3. We have a lot less code in memdep.
We can handle phi translation across blocks of things like @phi_trans3,
which is pretty insane :).
This patch should fix the miscompiles of 255.vortex, and I tested it
with a bootstrap of llvm-gcc, llvm-test and dejagnu of course.
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where it is not available. It's unclear how to get this inserted
computation into GVN's scalar availability sets, Owen, help? :)
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memdep keeps track of how PHIs affect the pointer in dep queries, which
allows it to eliminate the load in cases like rle-phi-translate.ll, which
basically end up being:
BB1:
X = load P
br BB3
BB2:
Y = load Q
br BB3
BB3:
R = phi [P] [Q]
load R
turning "load R" into a phi of X/Y. In addition to additional exposed
opportunities, this makes memdep safe in many cases that it wasn't before
(which is required for load PRE) and also makes it substantially more
efficient. For example, consider:
bb1: // has many predecessors.
P = some_operator()
load P
In this example, previously memdep would scan all the predecessors of BB1
to see if they had something that would mustalias P. In some cases (e.g.
test/Transforms/GVN/rle-must-alias.ll) it would actually find them and end
up eliminating something. In many other cases though, it would scan and not
find anything useful. MemDep now stops at a block if the pointer is defined
in that block and cannot be phi translated to predecessors. This causes it
to miss the (rare) cases like rle-must-alias.ll, but makes it faster by not
scanning tons of stuff that is unlikely to be useful. For example, this
speeds up GVN as a whole from 3.928s to 2.448s (60%)!. IMO, scalar GVN
should be enhanced to simplify the rle-must-alias pointer base anyway, which
would allow the loads to be eliminated.
In the future, this should be enhanced to phi translate through geps and
bitcasts as well (as indicated by FIXMEs) making memdep even more powerful.
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of a pointer. This allows is to catch more equivalencies. For example,
the type_lists_compatible_p function used to require two iterations of
the gvn pass (!) to delete its 18 redundant loads because the first pass
would CSE all the addressing computation cruft, which would unblock the
second memdep/gvn passes from recognizing them. This change allows
memdep/gvn to catch all 18 when run just once on the function (as is
typical :) instead of just 3.
On all of 403.gcc, this bumps up the # reundandancies found from:
63 gvn - Number of instructions PRE'd
153991 gvn - Number of instructions deleted
50069 gvn - Number of loads deleted
to:
63 gvn - Number of instructions PRE'd
154137 gvn - Number of instructions deleted
50185 gvn - Number of loads deleted
+120 loads deleted isn't bad.
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tricks based on readnone/readonly functions.
Teach memdep to look past readonly calls when analyzing
deps for a readonly call. This allows elimination of a
few more calls from 403.gcc:
before:
63 gvn - Number of instructions PRE'd
153986 gvn - Number of instructions deleted
50069 gvn - Number of loads deleted
after:
63 gvn - Number of instructions PRE'd
153991 gvn - Number of instructions deleted
50069 gvn - Number of loads deleted
5 calls isn't much, but this adds plumbing for the next change.
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track of whether the CachedNonLocalPointerInfo for a block is specific
to a block. If so, just return it without any pred scanning. This is
good for a 6% speedup on GVN (when it uses this lookup method, which
it doesn't right now).
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method. This will eventually take over load/store dep
queries from getNonLocalDependency. For now it works
fine, but is incredibly slow because it does no caching.
Lets not switch GVN to use it until that is fixed :)
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duplication of logic (in 2 places) to determine what pointer a
load/store touches. This will be addressed in a future commit.
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1. Merge the 'None' result into 'Normal', making loads
and stores return their dependencies on allocations as Normal.
2. Split the 'Normal' result into 'Clobber' and 'Def' to
distinguish between the cases when memdep knows the value is
produced from when we just know if may be changed.
3. Move some of the logic for determining whether readonly calls
are CSEs into memdep instead of it being in GVN. This still
leaves verification that the arguments are hte same to GVN to
let it know about value equivalences in different contexts.
4. Change memdep's call/call dependency analysis to use
getModRefInfo(CallSite,CallSite) instead of doing something
very weak. This only really matters for things like DSA, but
someday maybe we'll have some other decent context sensitive
analyses :)
5. This reimplements the guts of memdep to handle the new results.
6. This simplifies GVN significantly:
a) readonly call CSE is slightly simpler
b) I eliminated the "getDependencyFrom" chaining for load
elimination and load CSE doesn't have to worry about
volatile (they are always clobbers) anymore.
c) GVN no longer does any 'lastLoad' caching, leaving it to
memdep.
7. The logic in DSE is simplified a bit and sped up. A potentially
unsafe case was eliminated.
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