As part of the effort to transition to using Debug Records instead of
Debug intrinsics, some API/argument changes are necessary to achieve the
desired behavior from Debug Records. This particular fix involves
passing iterators instead of instruction pointers to the SetInsertPoint
function. While this is crucial in certain areas, it may be more than
needed in others, but it does not cause any harm.
The module currently stores the target triple as a string. This means
that any code that wants to actually use the triple first has to
instantiate a Triple, which is somewhat expensive. The change in #121652
caused a moderate compile-time regression due to this. While it would be
easy enough to work around, I think that architecturally, it makes more
sense to store the parsed Triple in the module, so that it can always be
directly queried.
For this change, I've opted not to add any magic conversions between
std::string and Triple for backwards-compatibilty purses, and instead
write out needed Triple()s or str()s explicitly. This is because I think
a decent number of them should be changed to work on Triple as well, to
avoid unnecessary conversions back and forth.
The only interesting part in this patch is that the default triple is
Triple("") instead of Triple() to preserve existing behavior. The former
defaults to using the ELF object format instead of unknown object
format. We should fix that as well.
Rename the function to reflect its correct behavior and to be consistent
with `Module::getOrInsertFunction`. This is also in preparation of
adding a new `Intrinsic::getDeclaration` that will have behavior similar
to `Module::getFunction` (i.e, just lookup, no creation).
to reflect the new license.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351636
Summary:
Update all rdtscp callsites in PerfMonitor so that they conform with the signature changes introduced in r341698.
Reviewers: grosser, bollu
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51928
llvm-svn: 341946
- Add a counter that is incremented once on exit from a scop.
- Test cases got split into two: one to test the cycles, and another one
to test trip counts.
- Sample output:
```name=sample-output.txt
scop function, entry block name, exit block name, total time, trip count
warmup, %entry.split, %polly.merge_new_and_old, 5180, 1
f, %entry.split, %polly.merge_new_and_old, 409944, 500
g, %entry.split, %polly.merge_new_and_old, 1226, 1
```
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33822
llvm-svn: 304543
We should bail out if performance monitoring is not supported, since
we would have no information to print per-scop, and `FinalStartBB`,
`ReturnFromFinal` would be `nullptr`.
Assert that these are not `nullptr` if performance monitoring is supported.
llvm-svn: 304529
Previously, we would generate one performance counter for all scops.
Now, we generate both the old information, as well as a per-scop
performance counter to generate finer grained information.
This patch needed a way to generate a unique name for a `Scop`.
The start region, end region, and function name combined provides a
unique `Scop` name. So, `Scop` has a new public API to provide its start
and end region names.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33723
llvm-svn: 304528
Instead of creating the declaration ourselves, we obtain it directly from the
LLVM intrinsic definitions. This addresses a post-review comment for r299359.
Suggested-by: Hongzing Zheng <etherzhhb@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 299360
Add support for -polly-codegen-perf-monitoring. When performance monitoring
is enabled, we emit performance monitoring code during code generation that
prints after program exit statistics about the total number of cycles executed
as well as the number of cycles spent in scops. This gives an estimate on how
useful polyhedral optimizations might be for a given program.
Example output:
Polly runtime information
-------------------------
Total: 783110081637
Scops: 663718949365
In the future, we might also add functionality to measure how much time is spent
in optimized scops and how many cycles are spent in the fallback code.
Reviewers: bollu,sebpop
Tags: #polly
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31599
llvm-svn: 299359