Late optimization passes like branch folding and tail duplication can
transform the machine code in a way that makes it expensive to keep the
register liveness information up to date. There is a fuzzy line between
register allocation and late scheduling where the liveness information
degrades.
The MRI::tracksLiveness() flag makes the line clear: While true,
liveness information is accurate, and can be used for register
scavenging. Once the flag is false, liveness information is not
accurate, and can only be used as a hint.
Late passes generally don't need the liveness information, but they will
sometimes use the register scavenger to help update it. The scavenger
enforces strict correctness, and we have to spend a lot of code to
update register liveness that may never be used.
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bit simpler by handling a common case explicitly.
Also, refactor the implementation to use a worklist based walk of the
recursive users, rather than trying to use value handles to detect and
recover from RAUWs during the recursive descent. This fixes a very
subtle bug in the previous implementation where degenerate control flow
structures could cause mutually recursive instructions (PHI nodes) to
collapse in just such a way that From became equal to To after some
amount of recursion. At that point, we hit the inf-loop that the assert
at the top attempted to guard against. This problem is defined away when
not using value handles in this manner. There are lots of comments
claiming that the WeakVH will protect against just this sort of error,
but they're not accurate about the actual implementation of WeakVHs,
which do still track RAUWs.
I don't have any test case for the bug this fixes because it requires
running the recursive simplification on unreachable phi nodes. I've no
way to either run this or easily write an input that triggers it. It was
found when using instruction simplification inside the inliner when
running over the nightly test-suite.
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This is necessary if the client wants to be able to mutate TargetOptions (for example, fast FP math mode) after the initial creation of the ExecutionEngine.
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the PassManager annoying and should be reimplemented as a decorator
on top of existing passes (as should the timing data).
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(and hopefully on Windows). The bots have been down most of the day
because of this, and it's not clear to me what all will be required to
fix it.
The commits started with r153205, then r153207, r153208, and r153221.
The first commit seems to be the real culprit, but I couldn't revert
a smaller number of patches.
When resubmitting, r153207 and r153208 should be folded into r153205,
they were simple build fixes.
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1. Declare a virtual function getPointerToNamedFunction() in JITMemoryManager
2. Move the implementation of getPointerToNamedFunction() form JIT/MCJIT to DefaultJITMemoryManager.
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Remaining "uncategorized" functions have been organized into their
proper place in the hierarchy. Some functions were moved around so
groups are defined together.
No code changes were made.
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This gives a lot of love to the docs for the C API. Like Clang's
documentation, the C API is now organized into a Doxygen "module"
(LLVMC). Each C header file is a child of the main module. Some modules
(like Core) have a hierarchy of there own. The produced documentation is
thus better organized (before everything was in one monolithic list).
This patch also includes a lot of new documentation for APIs in Core.h.
It doesn't document them all, but is better than none. Function docs are
missing @param and @return annotation, but the documentation body now
commonly provides help details (like the expected llvm::Value sub-type
to expect).
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ImmutAVLTree uses random unsigned values as keys into a DenseMap,
which could possibly happen to be the same value as the Tombstone or
Entry keys in the DenseMap.
Test case is hard to come up with. We randomly get failures on the
internal static analyzer bot, which most likely hits this issue
(hard to be 100% sure without the full stack).
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violations I introduced. Also sort some of the instructions to get
a more consistent ordering.
Suggestions on still better / more consistent formatting would be
welcome. I'm actually tempted to use a macro to define all of the
delegate methods...
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directly query the function information which this set was representing.
This simplifies the interface of the inline cost analysis, and makes the
always-inline pass significantly more efficient.
Previously, always-inline would first make a single set of every
function in the module *except* those marked with the always-inline
attribute. It would then query this set at every call site to see if the
function was a member of the set, and if so, refuse to inline it. This
is quite wasteful. Instead, simply check the function attribute directly
when looking at the callsite.
The normal inliner also had similar redundancy. It added every function
in the module with the noinline attribute to its set to ignore, even
though inside the cost analysis function we *already tested* the
noinline attribute and produced the same result.
The only tricky part of removing this is that we have to be able to
correctly remove only the functions inlined by the always-inline pass
when finalizing, which requires a bit of a hack. Still, much less of
a hack than the set of all non-always-inline functions was. While I was
touching this function, I switched a heavy-weight set to a vector with
sort+unique. The algorithm already had a two-phase insert and removal
pattern, we were just needlessly paying the uniquing cost on every
insert.
This probably speeds up some compiles by a small amount (-O0 compiles
with lots of always-inline, so potentially heavy libc++ users), but I've
not tried to measure it.
I believe there is no functional change here, but yell if you spot one.
None are intended.
Finally, the direction this is going in is to greatly simplify the
inline cost query interface so that we can replace its implementation
with a much more clever one. Along the way, all the APIs get simplified,
so it seems incrementally good.
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analysis implementation. The header was already separated. Also cleanup
all the comments in the header to follow a nice modern doxygen form.
There is still plenty of cruft here, but some of that will fall out in
subsequent refactorings and this was an easy step in the right
direction. No functionality changed here.
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Only record IVUsers that are dominated by simplified loop
headers. Otherwise SCEVExpander will crash while looking for a
preheader.
I previously tried to work around this in LSR itself, but that was
insufficient. This way, LSR can continue to run if some uses are not
in simple loops, as long as we don't attempt to analyze those users.
Fixes <rdar://problem/11049788> Segmentation fault: 11 in LoopStrengthReduce
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It caused MSP430DAGToDAGISel::SelectIndexedBinOp() to be miscompiled.
When two ReplaceUses()'s are expanded as inline, vtable in base class is stored to latter (ISelUpdater)ISU.
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We cannot limit the concatenated instruction names to 64K. ARM is
already at 32K, and it is easy to imagine a target with more
instructions.
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changed since. No one was using it. It is yet another consumer of the
InlineCost interface that I'd like to change.
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correlated pairs of pointer arguments at the callsite. This is designed
to recognize the common C++ idiom of begin/end pointer pairs when the
end pointer is a constant offset from the begin pointer. With the
C-based idiom of a pointer and size, the inline cost saw the constant
size calculation, and this provides the same level of information for
begin/end pairs.
In order to propagate this information we have to search for candidate
operations on a pair of pointer function arguments (or derived from
them) which would be simplified if the pointers had a known constant
offset. Then the callsite analysis looks for such pointer pairs in the
argument list, and applies the appropriate bonus.
This helps LLVM detect that half of bounds-checked STL algorithms
(such as hash_combine_range, and some hybrid sort implementations)
disappear when inlined with a constant size input. However, it's not
a complete fix due the inaccuracy of our cost metric for constants in
general. I'm looking into that next.
Benchmarks showed no significant code size change, and very minor
performance changes. However, specific code such as hashing is showing
significantly cleaner inlining decisions.
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Commit r152704 exposed a latent MSVC limitation (aka bug).
Both ilist and and iplist contains the same function:
template<class InIt> void insert(iterator where, InIt first, InIt last) {
for (; first != last; ++first) insert(where, *first);
}
Also ilist inherits from iplist and ilist contains a "using iplist<NodeTy>::insert".
MSVC doesn't know which one to pick and complain with an error.
I think it is safe to delete ilist::insert since it is redundant anyway.
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New flags: -misched-topdown, -misched-bottomup. They can be used with
the default scheduler or with -misched=shuffle. Without either
topdown/bottomup flag -misched=shuffle now alternates scheduling
direction.
LiveIntervals update is unimplemented with bottom-up scheduling, so
only -misched-topdown currently works.
Capped the ScheduleDAG hierarchy with a concrete ScheduleDAGMI class.
ScheduleDAGMI is aware of the top and bottom of the unscheduled zone
within the current region. Scheduling policy can be plugged into
the ScheduleDAGMI driver by implementing MachineSchedStrategy.
ConvergingScheduler is now the default scheduling algorithm.
It exercises the new driver but still does no reordering.
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