Instead of keeping two separate maps from Value to Allocas, one for
MemoryType::Value and the other for MemoryType::PHI, we introduce a single map
from ScopArrayInfo to the corresponding Alloca. This change is intended, both as
a general simplification and cleanup, but also to reduce our use of
MemoryAccess::getBaseAddr(). Moving away from using getBaseAddr() makes sure
we have only a single place where the array (and its base pointer) for which we
generate code for is specified, which means we can more easily introduce new
access functions that use a different ScopArrayInfo as base. We already today
experiment with modifiable access functions, so this change does not address
a specific bug, but it just reduces the scope one needs to reason about.
Another motivation for this patch is https://reviews.llvm.org/D28518, where
memory accesses with different base pointers could possibly be mapped to a
single ScopArrayInfo object. Such a mapping is currently not possible, as we
currently generate alloca instructions according to the base addresses of the
memory accesses, not according to the ScopArrayInfo object they belong to. By
making allocas ScopArrayInfo specific, a mapping to a single ScopArrayInfo
object will automatically mean that the same stack slot is used for these
arrays. For D28518 this is not a problem, as only MemoryType::Array objects are
mapping, but resolving this inconsistency will hopefully avoid confusion.
llvm-svn: 293374
Summary:
Instead of forbidding such access functions completely, we verify that their
base pointer has been hoisted and only assert in case the base pointer was
not hoisted.
I was trying for a little while to get a test case that ensures the assert is
correctly fired in case of invariant load hoisting being disabled, but I could
not find a good way to do so, as llvm-lit immediately aborts if a command
yields a non-zero return value. As we do not generally test our asserts,
not having a test case here seems OK.
This resolves http://llvm.org/PR31494
Suggested-by: Michael Kruse <llvm@meinersbur.de>
Reviewers: efriedma, jdoerfert, Meinersbur, gareevroman, sebpop, zinob, huihuiz, pollydev
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28798
llvm-svn: 292213
Aligning data to cache lines boundaries helps to avoid overheads related to
an access to it ([1]). This patch aligns newly created arrays and adds an
option to specify the first level cache line size. By default we use 64 bytes,
which is a typical cache-line size ([2]).
In case of Intel Core i7-3820 SandyBridge and the following options,
clang -O3 gemm.c -I utilities/ utilities/polybench.c -DPOLYBENCH_TIME
-march=native -mllvm -polly -mllvm -polly-pattern-matching-based-opts=true
-DPOLYBENCH_USE_SCALAR_LB -mllvm -polly-target-cache-level-associativity=8,8
-mllvm -polly-target-cache-level-sizes=32768,262144 -mllvm
-polly-target-latency-vector-fma=8
it helps to improve the performance from 11.303 GFlops/sec (39,247% of
theoretical peak) to 12.63 GFlops/sec (43,8542% of theoretical peak).
Refs.:
[1] - http://www.alexonlinux.com/aligned-vs-unaligned-memory-access
[2] - http://igoro.com/archive/gallery-of-processor-cache-effects/
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28020
Reviewed-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
llvm-svn: 290253
In '[DBG] Allow to emit the RTC value at runtime' the diagnostics were printed
without a newline at the end of each diagnostic. We add such a newline to
improve readability.
llvm-svn: 288323
Introduce the new flag -polly-codegen-generate-expressions which forces Polly
to code generate AST expressions instead of using our SCEV based access
expression generation even for cases where the original memory access relation
was not changed and the SCEV based access expression could be code generated
without any issue.
This is an experimental option for better testing the isl ast expression
generation. The default behavior of Polly remains unchanged. We also exclude
a couple of cases for which the AST expression is not yet working.
llvm-svn: 287694
The new command line flag "polly-codegen-emit-rtc-print" can be used to
place a "printf" in the generated code that will print the RTC value and
the overflow state.
llvm-svn: 287265
This makes polly generate a CFG which is closer to what we want
in LLVM IR, with a loop preheader for the original loop. This is
just a cleanup, but it exposes some fragile assumptions.
I'm not completely happy with the changes related to expandCodeFor;
RTCBB->getTerminator() is basically a random insertion point which
happens to work due to the way we generate runtime checks. I'm not
sure what the right answer looks like, though.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26053
llvm-svn: 285864
Currently Polly cannot generate code for index expressions if the base pointer
is computed within the scop. The base pointer must be generated as well, but
there is no code that triggers that.
Add an assertion to detect when this would occur and miscompile. The IR verifier
should catch it as well.
llvm-svn: 282893
This is the fourth patch to apply the BLIS matmul optimization pattern on matmul
kernels (http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/flame/pubs/TOMS-BLIS-Analytical.pdf).
BLIS implements gemm as three nested loops around a macro-kernel, plus two
packing routines. The macro-kernel is implemented in terms of two additional
loops around a micro-kernel. The micro-kernel is a loop around a rank-1
(i.e., outer product) update. In this change we perform copying to created
arrays, which is the last step to implement the packing transformation.
Reviewed-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23260
llvm-svn: 281441
We do not need the size of the outermost dimension in most cases, but if we
allocate memory for newly created arrays, that size is needed.
Reviewed-by: Michael Kruse <llvm@meinersbur.de>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23991
llvm-svn: 281234
LLVM's coding guideline suggests to not use @brief for one-sentence doxygen
comments to improve readability. Switch this once and for all to ensure people
do not copy @brief comments from other parts of Polly, when writing new code.
llvm-svn: 280468
... instead of adding instructions at the end of the basic block the builder
is currently at. This makes it easier to reason about where IR is generated,
as with the IRBuilder there is just a single location that specificies where
IR is generated.
llvm-svn: 278013
Pass the content of scalar array references to the alloca on the kernel side
and do not pass them additional as normal LLVM scalar value.
llvm-svn: 277699
Extend the jscop interface to allow the user to export arrays. It is required
that already existing arrays of the list of arrays correspond to arrays
of the SCoP. Each array that is appended to the list will be newly created.
Furthermore, we allow the user to modify access expressions to reference
any array in case it has the same element type.
Reviewed-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22828
llvm-svn: 277263
Commit r275056 introduced a gcc compile failure due to us using two
types named 'Type', the first being the newly introduced member variable
'Type' the second being llvm::Type. We resolve this issue by renaming
the newly introduced member variable to AccessType.
llvm-svn: 275057
Summary:
With a struct we can use named accessors instead of generic std::get<3>()
calls. This increases readability of the source code.
Reviewers: jdoerfert
Subscribers: pollydev, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21955
llvm-svn: 275056
The recent expression type changes still need more discussion, which will happen
on phabricator or on the mailing list. The precise list of commits reverted are:
- "Refactor division generation code"
- "[NFC] Generate runtime checks after the SCoP"
- "[FIX] Determine insertion point during SCEV expansion"
- "Look through IntToPtr & PtrToInt instructions"
- "Use minimal types for generated expressions"
- "Temporarily promote values to i64 again"
- "[NFC] Avoid unnecessary comparison for min/max expressions"
- "[Polly] Fix -Wunused-variable warnings (NFC)"
- "[NFC] Simplify min/max expression generation"
- "Simplify the type adjustment in the IslExprBuilder"
Some of them are just reverted as we would otherwise get conflicts. I will try
to re-commit them if possible.
llvm-svn: 272483
We now use the minimal necessary bit width for the generated code. If
operations might overflow (add/sub/mul) we will try to adjust the types in
order to ensure a non-wrapping computation. If the type adjustment is not
possible, thus the necessary type is bigger than the type value of
--polly-max-expr-bit-width, we will use assumptions to verify the computation
will not wrap. However, for run-time checks we cannot build assumptions but
instead utilize overflow tracking intrinsics.
llvm-svn: 271878
We now have a simple function to adjust/unify the types of two (or three)
operands before an operation that requieres the same type for all operands.
Due to this change we will not promote parameters that are added to i64
anymore if that is not needed.
llvm-svn: 271513
We utilize assumptions on the input to model IR in polyhedral world.
To verify these assumptions we version the code and guard it with a
runtime-check (RTC). However, since the RTCs are themselves generated
from the polyhedral representation we generate them under the same
assumptions that they should verify. In other words, the guarantees
that we try to provide with the RTCs do not hold for the RTCs
themselves. To this end it is necessary to employ a different check
for the RTCs that will verify the assumptions did hold for them too.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20165
llvm-svn: 269299
Previously we checked the number of pieces to decide whether or not a
invariant load was to complex to be generated. However, there are
cases when e.g., divisions cause the complexity to spike regardless of
the number of pieces. To this end we now check the number of totally
involved dimensions which will increase with the number of pieces but
also the number of divisions.
llvm-svn: 269045
The check for complexity compares the number of polyhedra in a set,
which are combined by disjunctions (union, "OR"),
not conjunctions (intersection, "AND").
llvm-svn: 268223
If the base pointer of an invariant load is is loaded conditionally, that
condition needs to hold for the invariant load too. The structure of the
program will imply this for domain constraints but not for imprecisions in
the modeling. To this end we will propagate the execution context of base
pointers during code generation and thus ensure the derived pointer does
not access an invalid base pointer.
llvm-svn: 267707
We verify the optimized function now for a long time and it helped to track
down bugs early. This will now also happen for all parallel subfunctions we
generate.
llvm-svn: 265823
The findValues() function did not look through div & srem instructions
that were part of the argument SCEV. However, in different other
places we already look through it. This mismatch caused us to preload
values in the wrong order.
llvm-svn: 265775
Polly recognizes affine loops that ScalarEvolution does not, in
particular those with loop conditions that depend on hoisted invariant
loads. Check for SCEVAddRec dependencies on such loops and do not
consider their exit values as synthesizable because SCEVExpander would
generate them as expressions that depend on the original induction
variables. These are not available in generated code.
llvm-svn: 262404
Replace Scop::getStmtForBasicBlock and Scop::getStmtForRegionNode, and
add overloads for llvm::Instruction and llvm::RegionNode.
getStmtFor and overloads become the common interface to get the Stmt
that contains something. Named after LoopInfo::getLoopFor and
RegionInfo::getRegionFor.
llvm-svn: 261791