D128820 stopped creating div/rem constant expressions by default;
this patch removes support for them entirely.
The getUDiv(), getExactUDiv(), getSDiv(), getExactSDiv(), getURem()
and getSRem() on ConstantExpr are removed, and ConstantExpr::get()
now only accepts binary operators for which
ConstantExpr::isSupportedBinOp() returns true. Uses of these methods
may be replaced either by corresponding IRBuilder methods, or
ConstantFoldBinaryOpOperands (if a constant result is required).
On the C API side, LLVMConstUDiv, LLVMConstExactUDiv, LLVMConstSDiv,
LLVMConstExactSDiv, LLVMConstURem and LLVMConstSRem are removed and
corresponding LLVMBuild methods should be used.
Importantly, this also means that constant expressions can no longer
trap! This patch still keeps the canTrap() method to minimize diff --
I plan to drop it in a separate NFC patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129148
This patch replaces the tight hard cut-off for the number of runtime
checks with a more accurate cost-driven approach.
The new approach allows vectorization with a larger number of runtime
checks in general, but only executes the vector loop (and runtime checks) if
considered profitable at runtime. Profitable here means that the cost-model
indicates that the runtime check cost + vector loop cost < scalar loop cost.
To do that, LV computes the minimum trip count for which runtime check cost
+ vector-loop-cost < scalar loop cost.
Note that there is still a hard cut-off to avoid excessive compile-time/code-size
increases, but it is much larger than the original limit.
The performance impact on standard test-suites like SPEC2006/SPEC2006/MultiSource
is mostly neutral, but the new approach can give substantial gains in cases where
we failed to vectorize before due to the over-aggressive cut-offs.
On AArch64 with -O3, I didn't observe any regressions outside the noise level (<0.4%)
and there are the following execution time improvements. Both `IRSmk` and `srad` are relatively short running, but the changes are far above the noise level for them on my benchmark system.
```
CFP2006/447.dealII/447.dealII -1.9%
CINT2017rate/525.x264_r/525.x264_r -2.2%
ASC_Sequoia/IRSmk/IRSmk -9.2%
Rodinia/srad/srad -36.1%
```
`size` regressions on AArch64 with -O3 are
```
MultiSource/Applications/hbd/hbd 90256.00 106768.00 18.3%
MultiSourc...ks/ASCI_Purple/SMG2000/smg2000 240676.00 257268.00 6.9%
MultiSourc...enchmarks/mafft/pairlocalalign 472603.00 489131.00 3.5%
External/S...2017rate/525.x264_r/525.x264_r 613831.00 630343.00 2.7%
External/S...NT2006/464.h264ref/464.h264ref 818920.00 835448.00 2.0%
External/S...te/538.imagick_r/538.imagick_r 1994730.00 2027754.00 1.7%
MultiSourc...nchmarks/tramp3d-v4/tramp3d-v4 1236471.00 1253015.00 1.3%
MultiSource/Applications/oggenc/oggenc 2108147.00 2124675.00 0.8%
External/S.../CFP2006/447.dealII/447.dealII 4742999.00 4759559.00 0.3%
External/S...rate/510.parest_r/510.parest_r 14206377.00 14239433.00 0.2%
```
Reviewed By: lebedev.ri, ebrevnov, dmgreen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109368
At the moment, the same VPlan can be used code generation of both the
main vector and epilogue vector loop. This can lead to wrong results, if
the plan is optimized based on the VF of the main vector loop and then
re-used for the epilogue loop.
One example where this is problematic is if the scalar loops need to
execute at least one iteration, e.g. due to interleave groups.
To prevent mis-compiles in the short-term, disable optimizing exit
conditions for VPlans when using epilogue vectorization. The proper fix
is to avoid re-using the same plan for both loops, which will require
support for cloning plans first.
Fixes#56319.
I looked at canonicalizing in the other direction, but that causes
many potential regressions and infinite loops because we already
(possibly wrongly) canonicalize "trunc X to i1" into an and+icmp.
This has a data layout restriction to avoid creating illegal
mask instructions, but we could remove that if we can show
that the backend can undo this when needed.
The motivating example from issue #56119 is modeled by the
PhaseOrdering test.
At the moment LoopVersioning is only created for inner-loop
vectorization. This patch moves it to LVP::execute, which means it will
also be added for epilogue vectorization. As a consequence, the proper
noalias metadata is now also added to epilogue vector loops.
LVer will be moved to VPTransformState as follow-up.
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127966
In some cases, there may be widened users of inductions even though the
plan includes the scalar VF. In those cases, make sure we still replace
the VPWidenIntOrFpInductionRecipe with scalar steps, as otherwise we may
try to execute a VPWidenIntOrFpInductionRecipe with a scalar VF.
Alternatively the patch could also split the range if needed.
This fixes a crash exposed by D123720.
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128755
This change is a bit subtle. If we have a type like <vscale x 1 x i64>, the vectorizer will currently reject vectorization. The reason is that a type like <1 x i64> is likely to get simply rescalarized, and the vectorizer doesn't want to be in the game of simple unrolling.
(I've given the example in terms of 1 x types which use a single register, but the same issue exists for any N x types which use N registers. e.g. RISCV LMULs.)
This change distinguishes scalable types from fixed types under the reasoning that converting to a scalable type isn't unrolling. Because the actual vscale isn't known until runtime, using a vscale type is potentially very profitable.
This makes an important, but unchecked, assumption. Specifically, the scalable type is assumed to only be legal per the cost model if there's actually a scalable register class which is distinct from the scalar domain. This is, to my knowledge, true for all targets which return non-invalid costs for scalable vector ops today, but in theory, we could have a target decide to lower scalable to fixed length vector or even scalar registers. If that ever happens, we'd need to revisit this code.
In practice, this patch unblocks scalable vectorization for ELEN types on RISCV.
Let me sketch one alternate implementation I considered. We could have restricted this to when we know a minimum value for vscale. Specifically, for the default +v extension for RISCV, we actually know that vscale >= 2 for ELEN types. However, doing it this way means we can't generate scalable vectors when using the various embedded vector extensions which have a minimum vscale of 1.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128542
LoopVectorizer uses getVScaleForTuning for deciding how to discount the cost of a potential vector factor by the amount of work performed. Without the callback implemented, the vectorizer was defaulting to an estimated vscale of 1. This results in fixed vectorization looking falsely profitable (since it used the command line VLEN).
The test change is pretty limited since a) we don't have much coverage of the vectorizer with scalable vectors at all, and b) what little coverage we have mostly uses i64 element types. There's a separate issue with <vscale x 1 x i64> which prevents us from getting to this stage of costing, and thus only the one test explicitly written to avoid that is visible in the diff. However, this is actually a very wide impact change as it changes the practical vectorization result when both fixed and scalable is enabled to scalable.
As an aside, I think the vectorizer is at little too strongly biased towards scalable when both are legal, but we can explore that separately. For now, let's just get the cost model working the way it was intended.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128547
We currently have a costing bug around the etype == ELEN case, so add otherwise duplicate tests to show test diffs as I work on other parts of costing.
If we have an unaligned uniform store, then when costing a scalable VF we can't emit code to scalarize it. (Well, we could, but we haven't implemented that case.) This change replaces an assert with a cost-model bailout such that we reject vectorization with the scalable VF instead of crashing.
createInductionResumeValues creates a phi node placeholder
without filling incoming values. Then it generates the incoming values.
It includes triggering of SCEV expander which may invoke SSAUpdater.
SSAUpdater has an optimization to detect number of predecessors
basing on incoming values if there is phi node.
In case phi node is not filled with incoming values - the number of predecessors
is detected as 0 and this leads to segmentation fault.
In other words SSAUpdater expects that phi is in good shape while
LoopVectorizer breaks this requirement.
The fix is just prepare all incoming values first and then build a phi node.
Reviewed By: fhahn
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128033
This just adds some very basic vectorizer testing with both fixed and scalable vectorization enabled. For context, I just yesterday fixed a crash in costing of the splat_ptr example - see bbf3fd.
In some cases, a recurrence splice instructions needs to be inserted
between to regions, for example if the regions get re-arranged during
sinking.
Fixes#56146.
This reverts commit 7aa8a678826dea86ff3e6c7df9d2a8a6ef868f5d.
This version includes fixes to address issues uncovered after
the commit landed and discussed at D11448.
Those include:
* Limit select-traversal to selects inside the loop.
* Freeze pointers resulting from looking through selects to avoid
branch-on-poison.
TTI::prefersVectorizedAddressing() try to vectorize the addresses that lead to loads.
For aarch64, only gather/scatter (supported by SVE) can deal with vectors of addresses.
This patch specializes the hook for AArch64, to return true only when we enable SVE.
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D124612
This brings us into alignment with AArch64, and in the process fixes a compiler crash bug in uniform store handling in the vectorizer.
Before the recent invalid cost bailout work, this would have also avoided crashes on invalid costs in some cases. I honestly think the vectorizer should gracefully bailout on uniform stores it can't use a scatter for, but it doesn't, so lets take the path of least resistance here. It's also possible that there are other vectorizer bugs AArch64 isn't seeing because of this hook; we don't want to be finding them either.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127514
This reverts commit 1fbdbb559569641f6d509b569966901c8fb02b63.
All known issues surfaced by this patch should have been fixed now.
The fixes included fixing issues with SCEV expansion in LV and DA's
reliance on LCSSA phis.
All information is already available in VPlan. Note that there are some
test changes, because we now can correctly look through instructions
like truncates to analyze the actual users.
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123541
Based on reviewer comments on https://reviews.llvm.org/D126692 I've
added FastMathFlags to the select instruction used when tail-folding
with reductions. These flags can then be used by InstCombine to
decide upon the most optimal floating point identity value for
fadd/fsub. Doing so unlocks further optimisations, such as folding
selects into masked loads.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126778
Try to simplify BranchOnCount to `BranchOnCond true` if TC <= UF * VF.
This is an alternative to D121899 which simplifies the VPlan directly
instead of doing so late in code-gen.
The potential benefit of doing this in VPlan is that this may help
cost-modeling in the future. The reason this is done in prepareToExecute
at the moment is that a single plan may be used for multiple VFs/UFs.
There are further simplifications that can be applied as follow ups:
1. Replace inductions with constants
2. Replace vector region with regular block.
Fixes#55354.
Depends on D126679.
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126680
The default RegisterClass is not enough to model RISCV Register.
We define risc-v's own register class to model FP Register.
This helps to better estimate the register pressure in the loop-vectorize.
Reviewed By: kito-cheng
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126854
This patch removes CondBit and Predicate from VPBasicBlock. To do so,
the patch introduces a new branch-on-cond VPInstruction opcode to model
a branch on a condition explicitly.
This addresses a long-standing TODO/FIXME that blocks shouldn't be users
of VPValues. Those extra users can cause issues for VPValue-based
analyses that don't expect blocks. Addressing this fixme should allow us
to re-introduce 266ea446ab7476.
The generic branch opcode can also be used in follow-up patches.
Depends on D123005.
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126618
This patch updates the VPlan native path to use VPRegionBlocks for all
loops in a loop nest. Up to now, only the outermost loop used a region.
This is a step towards unifying both paths and keep things consistent
between them. It also prepares various code-gen parts for modeling the
pre-header in the inner loop vectorizer (D121624).
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123005
Now that SimpleLoopUnswitch and other transforms no longer introduce
branch on poison, enable the -branch-on-poison-as-ub option by
default. The practical impact of this is mostly better flag
preservation in SCEV, and some freeze instructions no longer being
necessary.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D125299
When reassociating GEPs, we can only keep inbounds if both original
GEPs were inbounds, and their offsets have the same sign. For the
sake of simplicity, I only handle the case where both offsets are
non-negative here.
It would probably be fine to just not preserve inbounds at all here,
but as I don't see a compile-time impact for adding the
isKnownNonNegative() calls I went with this more conservative
approach.
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/44206.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126687
If only one of the GEPs is inbounds, then after swapping, there is
no guarantee that one of them will be inbounds as well
(see e.g. https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/agaCnp).
This is only a partial fix, because even if both are inbounds, the
result is not necessarily inbounds (if the offsets have different
signs).
```
void vector_reverse_i64(int *A, int *B, int n) {
#pragma clang loop vectorize_width(4, scalable)
for (int i = n-1; i >= 0; i--)
A[i] = B[i] + 1;
}
```
When option: scalable-vectorization is on (or set #pragma clang loop vectorize_width(elements, scalable)), Reverse Iterators can't loop vectorization as <vscale x elements x elementType>
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D125866
When compiling the attached new test in scalable-reductions-tf.ll we
were hitting this assertion in fixReduction:
Assertion `isa<PHINode>(U) && "Reduction exit must feed Phi's or select"
The loop contains a reduction and an intermediate store of the reduction
value. When vectorising with tail-folding the contains of 'U' in the
assertion above happened to be a scatter_store. It turns out that we
were still creating a widen recipe for the invariant store, despite
knowing that we can actually sink it. The simplest fix is to change
buildVPlanWithVPRecipes so that we look for invariant stores before
attempting to widen it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126295
Previously, `getRegUsageForType` was implemented using
`getTypeLegalizationCost`. `getRegUsageForType` is used by the loop
vectorizer to estimate the register pressure caused by using a vector
type. However, `getTypeLegalizationCost` currently only appears to
understand splitting and not scalarization, so significantly
underestimates the register requirements.
Instead, use `getNumRegisters`, which understands when scalarization
can occur (via computeRegisterProperties).
This was discovered while investigating D118979 (Set maximum VF with
shouldMaximizeVectorBandwidth), where under fixed-length 512-bit SVE the
loop vectorizer previously ends up costing an v128i1 as 2 v64i*
registers where it actually occupies 128 i32 registers.
I'm sending this patch early for comment, I'm still doing some sanity checking
with LNT. I note that getRegisterClassForType appears to return VectorRC even
though the type in question (large vNi1 types) end up occupying scalar
registers. That might be worth fixing too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D125918
The latch may not be the exiting block. Use the exiting block instead
when looking up the incoming value of the LCSSA phi node. This fixes a
crash with early-exit loops.