the iterator hints we have to speed up overlaps(). This speeds linscan up
by about .2s (out of 8.7) on 175.vpr for PPC.
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* Eliminate the releaseMemory method, this is not an analysis
* Change the fixed, active, and inactive lists of intervals to maintain an
iterator for the current position in the interval. This allows us to do
constant time increments of the iterator instead of having to do a binary
search to find our liverange in our liveinterval all of the time, which
substantially speeds up cases where LiveIntervals have many LiveRanges
- which is very common for physical registers. On targets with many
physregs, this can make a noticable difference.
With a release build of LLC for PPC, this halves the time in
processInactiveIntervals and processActiveIntervals, from 1.5s to .75s.
This also lays the ground for more to come.
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Move include/Config and include/Support into include/llvm/Config,
include/llvm/ADT and include/llvm/Support. From here on out, all LLVM
public header files must be under include/llvm/.
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lists. Instead of scanning the vector backwards, scan it forward and
swap each element we want to erase. Then at the end erase all removed
intervals at once. This doesn't save much: 0.08s out of 4s when
compiling 176.gcc.
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LiveInterval>. This saves some space and removes the pointer
indirection caused by following the pointer.
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compilation of gcc:
* Use vectors instead of lists for the intervals sets
* Use a heap for the unhandled set to keep intervals always sorted and
makes insertions back to the heap very fast (compared to scanning a
list)
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unhandled + handled. So unhandled is now including all fixed intervals
and fixed intervals never changes when processing a function.
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allocator.
The implementation is completely rewritten and now employs several
optimizations not exercised before. For example for 164.gzip we have
997 loads and 699 stores vs the 1221 loads and 880 stores we have
before.
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1. LiveIntervals now implement a 4 slot per instruction model. Load,
Use, Def and a Store slot. This is required in order to correctly
represent caller saved register clobbering on function calls,
register reuse in the same instruction (def resues last use) and
also spill code added later by the allocator. The previous
representation (2 slots per instruction) was insufficient and as a
result was causing subtle bugs.
2. Fixes in spill code generation. This was the major cause of
failures in the test suite.
3. Linear scan now has core support for folding memory operands. This
is untested and not enabled (the live interval update function does
not attempt to fold loads/stores in instructions).
4. Lots of improvements in the debugging output of both live intervals
and linear scan. Give it a try... it is beautiful :-)
In summary the above fixes all the issues with the recent reserved
register elimination changes and get the allocator very close to the
next big step: folding memory operands.
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