llvm-6502/test/Analysis/LazyCallGraph/basic.ll
Chandler Carruth 4c7edb1240 [LCG] Add support for building persistent and connected SCCs to the
LazyCallGraph. This is the start of the whole point of this different
abstraction, but it is just the initial bits. Here is a run-down of
what's going on here. I'm planning to incorporate some (or all) of this
into comments going forward, hopefully with better editing and wording.
=]

The crux of the problem with the traditional way of building SCCs is
that they are ephemeral. The new pass manager however really needs the
ability to associate analysis passes and results of analysis passes with
SCCs in order to expose these analysis passes to the SCC passes. Making
this work is kind-of the whole point of the new pass manager. =]

So, when we're building SCCs for the call graph, we actually want to
build persistent nodes that stick around and can be reasoned about
later. We'd also like the ability to walk the SCC graph in more complex
ways than just the traditional postorder traversal of the current CGSCC
walk. That means that in addition to being persistent, the SCCs need to
be connected into a useful graph structure.

However, we still want the SCCs to be formed lazily where possible.

These constraints are quite hard to satisfy with the SCC iterator. Also,
using that would bypass our ability to actually add data to the nodes of
the call graph to facilite implementing the Tarjan walk. So I've
re-implemented things in a more direct and embedded way. This
immediately makes it easy to get the persistence and connectivity
correct, and it also allows leveraging the existing nodes to simplify
the algorithm. I've worked somewhat to make this implementation more
closely follow the traditional paper's nomenclature and strategy,
although it is still a bit obtuse because it isn't recursive, using
an explicit stack and a tail call instead, and it is interruptable,
resuming each time we need another SCC.

The other tricky bit here, and what actually took almost all the time
and trials and errors I spent building this, is exactly *what* graph
structure to build for the SCCs. The naive thing to build is the call
graph in its newly acyclic form. I wrote about 4 versions of this which
did precisely this. Inevitably, when I experimented with them across
various use cases, they became incredibly awkward. It was all
implementable, but it felt like a complete wrong fit. Square peg, round
hole. There were two overriding aspects that pushed me in a different
direction:

1) We want to discover the SCC graph in a postorder fashion. That means
   the root node will be the *last* node we find. Using the call-SCC DAG
   as the graph structure of the SCCs results in an orphaned graph until
   we discover a root.

2) We will eventually want to walk the SCC graph in parallel, exploring
   distinct sub-graphs independently, and synchronizing at merge points.
   This again is not helped by the call-SCC DAG structure.

The structure which, quite surprisingly, ended up being completely
natural to use is the *inverse* of the call-SCC DAG. We add the leaf
SCCs to the graph as "roots", and have edges to the caller SCCs. Once
I switched to building this structure, everything just fell into place
elegantly.

Aside from general cleanups (there are FIXMEs and too few comments
overall) that are still needed, the other missing piece of this is
support for iterating across levels of the SCC graph. These will become
useful for implementing #2, but they aren't an immediate priority.

Once SCCs are in good shape, I'll be working on adding mutation support
for incremental updates and adding the pass manager that this analysis
enables.

git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@206581 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
2014-04-18 10:50:32 +00:00

177 lines
3.5 KiB
LLVM

; RUN: opt -disable-output -passes=print-cg %s 2>&1 | FileCheck %s
;
; Basic validation of the call graph analysis used in the new pass manager.
define void @f() {
; CHECK-LABEL: Call edges in function: f
; CHECK-NOT: ->
entry:
ret void
}
; A bunch more functions just to make it easier to test several call edges at once.
define void @f1() {
ret void
}
define void @f2() {
ret void
}
define void @f3() {
ret void
}
define void @f4() {
ret void
}
define void @f5() {
ret void
}
define void @f6() {
ret void
}
define void @f7() {
ret void
}
define void @f8() {
ret void
}
define void @f9() {
ret void
}
define void @f10() {
ret void
}
define void @f11() {
ret void
}
define void @f12() {
ret void
}
declare i32 @__gxx_personality_v0(...)
define void @test0() {
; CHECK-LABEL: Call edges in function: test0
; CHECK-NEXT: -> f
; CHECK-NOT: ->
entry:
call void @f()
call void @f()
call void @f()
call void @f()
ret void
}
define void ()* @test1(void ()** %x) {
; CHECK-LABEL: Call edges in function: test1
; CHECK-NEXT: -> f12
; CHECK-NEXT: -> f11
; CHECK-NEXT: -> f10
; CHECK-NEXT: -> f7
; CHECK-NEXT: -> f9
; CHECK-NEXT: -> f8
; CHECK-NEXT: -> f6
; CHECK-NEXT: -> f5
; CHECK-NEXT: -> f4
; CHECK-NEXT: -> f3
; CHECK-NEXT: -> f2
; CHECK-NEXT: -> f1
; CHECK-NOT: ->
entry:
br label %next
dead:
br label %next
next:
phi void ()* [ @f1, %entry ], [ @f2, %dead ]
select i1 true, void ()* @f3, void ()* @f4
store void ()* @f5, void ()** %x
call void @f6()
call void (void ()*, void ()*)* bitcast (void ()* @f7 to void (void ()*, void ()*)*)(void ()* @f8, void ()* @f9)
invoke void @f10() to label %exit unwind label %unwind
exit:
ret void ()* @f11
unwind:
%res = landingpad { i8*, i32 } personality i32 (...)* @__gxx_personality_v0
cleanup
resume { i8*, i32 } { i8* bitcast (void ()* @f12 to i8*), i32 42 }
}
@g = global void ()* @f1
@g1 = global [4 x void ()*] [void ()* @f2, void ()* @f3, void ()* @f4, void ()* @f5]
@g2 = global {i8, void ()*, i8} {i8 1, void ()* @f6, i8 2}
@h = constant void ()* @f7
define void @test2() {
; CHECK-LABEL: Call edges in function: test2
; CHECK-NEXT: -> f7
; CHECK-NEXT: -> f6
; CHECK-NEXT: -> f5
; CHECK-NEXT: -> f4
; CHECK-NEXT: -> f3
; CHECK-NEXT: -> f2
; CHECK-NEXT: -> f1
; CHECK-NOT: ->
load i8** bitcast (void ()** @g to i8**)
load i8** bitcast (void ()** getelementptr ([4 x void ()*]* @g1, i32 0, i32 2) to i8**)
load i8** bitcast (void ()** getelementptr ({i8, void ()*, i8}* @g2, i32 0, i32 1) to i8**)
load i8** bitcast (void ()** @h to i8**)
ret void
}
; Verify the SCCs formed.
;
; CHECK-LABEL: SCC with 1 functions:
; CHECK-NEXT: f7
;
; CHECK-LABEL: SCC with 1 functions:
; CHECK-NEXT: f6
;
; CHECK-LABEL: SCC with 1 functions:
; CHECK-NEXT: f5
;
; CHECK-LABEL: SCC with 1 functions:
; CHECK-NEXT: f4
;
; CHECK-LABEL: SCC with 1 functions:
; CHECK-NEXT: f3
;
; CHECK-LABEL: SCC with 1 functions:
; CHECK-NEXT: f2
;
; CHECK-LABEL: SCC with 1 functions:
; CHECK-NEXT: f1
;
; CHECK-LABEL: SCC with 1 functions:
; CHECK-NEXT: test2
;
; CHECK-LABEL: SCC with 1 functions:
; CHECK-NEXT: f12
;
; CHECK-LABEL: SCC with 1 functions:
; CHECK-NEXT: f11
;
; CHECK-LABEL: SCC with 1 functions:
; CHECK-NEXT: f10
;
; CHECK-LABEL: SCC with 1 functions:
; CHECK-NEXT: f9
;
; CHECK-LABEL: SCC with 1 functions:
; CHECK-NEXT: f8
;
; CHECK-LABEL: SCC with 1 functions:
; CHECK-NEXT: test1
;
; CHECK-LABEL: SCC with 1 functions:
; CHECK-NEXT: f
;
; CHECK-LABEL: SCC with 1 functions:
; CHECK-NEXT: test0