Add nuw attribute to inbounds GEPs where the expression used to form the
GEP is an addition of unsigned indices.
Relands #105496, which was reverted because it exposed a miscompilation
arising from #98608. This is now fixed by #106512.
Generate nuw GEPs for struct member accesses, as inbounds + non-negative
implies nuw.
Regression tests are updated using update scripts where possible, and by
find + replace where not.
A kernel implicit parameter (dyn_ptr) was introduced some time back.
This patch increments the kernel args version for a compiler supporting
dyn_ptr. The version will be used by the runtime to determine whether
the implicit parameter is generated by the compiler. The versioning is
required to support use cases where code generated by an older compiler
is linked with a newer runtime.
If approved, this patch should be backported to release 18.
Summary:
Currently, OpenMP handles the `omp requires` clause by emitting a global
constructor into the runtime for every translation unit that requires
it. However, this is not a great solution because it prevents us from
having a defined order in which the runtime is accessed and used.
This patch changes the approach to no longer use global constructors,
but to instead group the flag with the other offloading entires that we
already handle. This has the effect of still registering each flag per
requires TU, but now we have a single constructor that handles
everything.
This function removes support for the old `__tgt_register_requires` and
replaces it with a warning message. We just had a recent release, and
the OpenMP policy for the past four releases since we switched to LLVM
is that we do not provide strict backwards compatibility between major
LLVM releases now that the library is versioned. This means that a user
will need to recompile if they have an old binary that relied on
`register_requires` having the old behavior. It is important that we
actively deprecate this, as otherwise it would not solve the problem of
having no defined init and shutdown order for `libomptarget`. The
problem of `libomptarget` not having a define init and shutdown order
cascades into a lot of other issues so I have a strong incentive to be
rid of it.
It is worth noting that the current `__tgt_offload_entry` only has space
for a 32-bit integer here. I am planning to overhaul these at some point
as well.
The KernelEnvironment is for compile time information about a kernel. It
allows the compiler to feed information to the runtime. The
KernelLaunchEnvironment is for dynamic information *per* kernel launch.
It allows the rutime to feed information to the kernel that is not
shared with other invocations of the kernel. The first use case is to
replace the globals that synchronize teams reductions with per-launch
versions. This allows concurrent teams reductions. More uses cases will
follow, e.g., per launch memory pools.
Fixes: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/70249
We used to have two separate implementations to derive the number of
threads used in a target region. This lead us to sometimes miss out on
user provided thread bounds (num_threads, or thread_limit) when we
looked for "constant default values". If we might miss out on the
presence of those bounds, we cannot set the thread_limit statically
since the runtime will try to honor user input rather than cap it at the
"preferred default". This patch replaces the secondary implementation
with the primary in a mode that will not emit code but just look for the
presence, and potentially upper bounds, of thread limiting clauses.
The runtime test would not pass without this rewrite as we missed some
clauses, set the static limit on the device to the preferred value, but
then violated that value at runtime.
Fixes: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/64845
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D158381
This patch prefixes omp outlined helpers and reduction funcs
with the original function's name.
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D140722
This patch attempts to prefix omp outlined helpers and reduction funcs
with the original function's name.
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D140722
If an inlined kernel is called in a loop, the launch point alloca would
lead to increasing stack usage every time the kernel is invoked. This
could make the application run out of stack space and crash. This problem
is fixed by using the alloca insertion point while creating the alloca instruction.
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/60602
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D145820