This is a follow-up to D133777, which resolved a use-after-free case but
did not cover all possible memory bugs due to misplacement of loads.
In short, the overall problem was that sinked loads could be moved after
state-modifying instructions leading to memory bugs.
The solution is to restrict load sinking unless it is found to be sound.
i) Within a basic block (to-be-sinked load and select-user are in the same BB),
loads can be sinked only if there is no intervening state-modifying instruction.
This is a conservative approach to avoid resorting to alias analysis to detect
potential memory overlap.
ii) Across basic blocks, sinking of loads is avoided. This is because going over
multiple basic blocks looking for memory conflicts could be computationally
expensive and also unlikely to allow loads to sink. Further, experiments showed
that not sinking these loads has a slight positive performance effect.
Maybe for some of these loads, having some separation allows enough time
for the load to be executed in time for its user. This is not the case for
floating point operations that benefit more from sinking.
The solution in D133777 was essentially undone in this patch,
since the latter is a complete solution to the observed problem.
Overall, the performance impact of this patch is minimal.
Tested on two internal Google workloads with instrPGO.
Search application showed <0.05% perf difference,
while the database one showed a slight improvement,
but not statistically significant.
Reviewed By: davidxl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D133999
When a select is converted to a branch and load instructions are sinked to the true/false blocks,
lifetime intrinsics (if present) could be made unsound if not moved.
This conservatively moves all lifetime intrinsics in a transformed BB to the end block to ensure
preserved lifetime semantics.
Reviewed By: davidxl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D133777
In this patch we replace common code patterns with the use of utility
functions for dealing with profiling metadata. There should be no change
in functionality, as the existing checks should be preserved in all
cases.
Reviewed By: bogner, davidxl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128860
In this patch we replace common code patterns with the use of utility
functions for dealing with profiling metadata. There should be no change
in functionality, as the existing checks should be preserved in all
cases.
Reviewed By: bogner, davidxl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128860
Use container::size_type directly to avoid type mismatch causing build failures in Windows.
Original commit message:
This patch optimizes the transformation of selects to a branch when the heuristics deemed it profitable.
It aggressively sinks eligible instructions to the newly created true/false blocks to prevent their
execution on the common path and interleaves dependence slices to maximize ILP.
Depends on D120232
Reviewed By: davidxl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120233
This patch optimizes the transformation of selects to a branch when the heuristics deemed it profitable.
It aggressively sinks eligible instructions to the newly created true/false blocks to prevent their
execution on the common path and interleaves dependence slices to maximize ILP.
Depends on D120232
Reviewed By: davidxl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120233
This patch adds the loop-level heuristics for determining whether branches are more profitable than conditional moves.
These heuristics apply to only inner-most loops.
Depends on D120231
Reviewed By: davidxl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120232
This patch adds the base heuristics for determining whether branches are more profitable than conditional moves.
Base heuristics apply to all code apart from inner-most loops.
Depends on D122259
Reviewed By: davidxl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120231
This patch implements the actual transformation of selects to branches.
It includes only the base transformation without any sinking.
Depends on D120230
Reviewed By: davidxl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122259
This is the first commit for the cmov-vs-branch optimization pass.
The goal is to develop a new profile-guided and target-independent cost/benefit analysis
for selecting conditional moves over branches when optimizing for performance.
Initially, this new pass is expected to be enabled only for instrumentation-based PGO.
RFC: https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-cmov-vs-branch-optimization/6040
Reviewed By: tejohnson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120230