Bingo! That works (when coming from C source) Now, I have a serious problem. I am not coming from C but I build the function with the builder. I am also forced to change the signature and load the pointers a,b,c afterwards: define void @bar([8 x i8]* nocapture readonly %arg_ptr) #0 { entrypoint: %0 = bitcast [8 x i8]* %arg_ptr to i32* %1 = load i32* %0, align 4 %2 = getelementptr [8 x i8]* %arg_ptr, i64 1 %3 = bitcast [8 x i8]* %2 to i32* %4 = load i32* %3, align 4 %5 = getelementptr [8 x i8]* %arg_ptr, i64 2 %6 = bitcast [8 x i8]* %5 to float** %7 = load float** %6, align 8 %8 = getelementptr [8 x i8]* %arg_ptr, i64 3 %9 = bitcast [8 x i8]* %8 to float** %10 = load float** %9, align 8 %11 = getelementptr [8 x i8]* %arg_ptr, i64 4 %12 = bitcast [8 x i8]* %11 to float** %13 = load float** %12, align 8 %14 = sext i32 %1 to i64 br label %L0 Now, these pointer (%7,%10,%13) are not qualified with 'restrict' and the loop vectorizer gives me the same message: LV: We can't vectorize because we can't find the array bounds. LV: Can't vectorize due to memory conflicts LV: Not vectorizing. I asked this a few days ago; now it comes up again: Is there a way to qualify a pointer/Value to be 'restrict'? Another possible solution would be telling the loop vectorizer that it's safe to treat all arrays as disjunct. Is this possible? Frank On 28/10/13 15:11, Hal Finkel wrote:> ----- Original Message ----- >> I am trying to vectorize the function >> >> void bar(float *c, float *a, float *b) >> { >> const int width = 256; >> for (int i = 0 ; i < 256 ; ++i ) { >> c[ i ] = a[ i ] + b[ i ]; >> c[ width + i ] = a[ width + i ] + b[ width + i ]; >> } >> } >> >> using the following commands >> >> clang -emit-llvm -S loop.c >> opt loop.ll -O3 -debug-only=loop-vectorize -S -o - >> >> LV: Checking a loop in "bar" >> LV: Found a loop: for.body >> LV: Found an induction variable. >> LV: Found an unidentified write ptr: float* %c >> LV: Found an unidentified write ptr: float* %c >> LV: Found an unidentified read ptr: float* %a >> LV: Found an unidentified read ptr: float* %b >> LV: Found an unidentified read ptr: float* %a >> LV: Found an unidentified read ptr: float* %b >> LV: Found a runtime check ptr: %arrayidx4 = getelementptr inbounds >> float* %c, i64 %indvars.iv >> LV: Found a runtime check ptr: %arrayidx14 = getelementptr inbounds >> float* %c, i64 %2 >> LV: Found a runtime check ptr: %arrayidx = getelementptr inbounds >> float* %a, i64 %indvars.iv >> LV: Found a runtime check ptr: %arrayidx2 = getelementptr inbounds >> float* %b, i64 %indvars.iv >> LV: Found a runtime check ptr: %arrayidx7 = getelementptr inbounds >> float* %a, i64 %2 >> LV: Found a runtime check ptr: %arrayidx10 = getelementptr inbounds >> float* %b, i64 %2 >> LV: We need to do 10 pointer comparisons. >> LV: We can't vectorize because we can't find the array bounds. >> LV: Can't vectorize due to memory conflicts >> LV: Not vectorizing. >> >> Is there any chance to make this work? > Try adding the restrict keyword to the function parameters: > > void bar(float * restrict c, float * restrict a, float * restrict b) > > -Hal > >> Frank >> >> _______________________________________________ >> LLVM Developers mailing list >> LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu >> http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev >>
----- Original Message -----> Bingo! That works (when coming from C source) > > Now, I have a serious problem. I am not coming from C but I build the > function with the builder. I am also forced to change the signature > and > load the pointers a,b,c afterwards: > > define void @bar([8 x i8]* nocapture readonly %arg_ptr) #0 { > entrypoint: > %0 = bitcast [8 x i8]* %arg_ptr to i32* > %1 = load i32* %0, align 4 > %2 = getelementptr [8 x i8]* %arg_ptr, i64 1 > %3 = bitcast [8 x i8]* %2 to i32* > %4 = load i32* %3, align 4 > %5 = getelementptr [8 x i8]* %arg_ptr, i64 2 > %6 = bitcast [8 x i8]* %5 to float** > %7 = load float** %6, align 8 > %8 = getelementptr [8 x i8]* %arg_ptr, i64 3 > %9 = bitcast [8 x i8]* %8 to float** > %10 = load float** %9, align 8 > %11 = getelementptr [8 x i8]* %arg_ptr, i64 4 > %12 = bitcast [8 x i8]* %11 to float** > %13 = load float** %12, align 8 > %14 = sext i32 %1 to i64 > br label %L0 > > Now, these pointer (%7,%10,%13) are not qualified with 'restrict' and > the loop vectorizer gives me the same message: > > LV: We can't vectorize because we can't find the array bounds. > LV: Can't vectorize due to memory conflicts > LV: Not vectorizing. > > I asked this a few days ago; now it comes up again: Is there a way to > qualify a pointer/Value to be 'restrict'?Currently, no. There will be work in that direction soon. You'll need to extract a sub-function so that you can put 'noalias' on the function arguments.> > Another possible solution would be telling the loop vectorizer that > it's > safe to treat all arrays as disjunct. Is this possible?Yes. Look for llvm.mem.parallel_loop_access in the language reference. -Hal> > Frank > > > > > On 28/10/13 15:11, Hal Finkel wrote: > > ----- Original Message ----- > >> I am trying to vectorize the function > >> > >> void bar(float *c, float *a, float *b) > >> { > >> const int width = 256; > >> for (int i = 0 ; i < 256 ; ++i ) { > >> c[ i ] = a[ i ] + b[ i ]; > >> c[ width + i ] = a[ width + i ] + b[ width + i ]; > >> } > >> } > >> > >> using the following commands > >> > >> clang -emit-llvm -S loop.c > >> opt loop.ll -O3 -debug-only=loop-vectorize -S -o - > >> > >> LV: Checking a loop in "bar" > >> LV: Found a loop: for.body > >> LV: Found an induction variable. > >> LV: Found an unidentified write ptr: float* %c > >> LV: Found an unidentified write ptr: float* %c > >> LV: Found an unidentified read ptr: float* %a > >> LV: Found an unidentified read ptr: float* %b > >> LV: Found an unidentified read ptr: float* %a > >> LV: Found an unidentified read ptr: float* %b > >> LV: Found a runtime check ptr: %arrayidx4 = getelementptr > >> inbounds > >> float* %c, i64 %indvars.iv > >> LV: Found a runtime check ptr: %arrayidx14 = getelementptr > >> inbounds > >> float* %c, i64 %2 > >> LV: Found a runtime check ptr: %arrayidx = getelementptr inbounds > >> float* %a, i64 %indvars.iv > >> LV: Found a runtime check ptr: %arrayidx2 = getelementptr > >> inbounds > >> float* %b, i64 %indvars.iv > >> LV: Found a runtime check ptr: %arrayidx7 = getelementptr > >> inbounds > >> float* %a, i64 %2 > >> LV: Found a runtime check ptr: %arrayidx10 = getelementptr > >> inbounds > >> float* %b, i64 %2 > >> LV: We need to do 10 pointer comparisons. > >> LV: We can't vectorize because we can't find the array bounds. > >> LV: Can't vectorize due to memory conflicts > >> LV: Not vectorizing. > >> > >> Is there any chance to make this work? > > Try adding the restrict keyword to the function parameters: > > > > void bar(float * restrict c, float * restrict a, float * restrict > > b) > > > > -Hal > > > >> Frank > >> > >> _______________________________________________ > >> LLVM Developers mailing list > >> LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu > >> http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev > >> > > >-- Hal Finkel Assistant Computational Scientist Leadership Computing Facility Argonne National Laboratory
Thanks for the alternatives! I am trying the 'extracting sub-function' approach. However, it seems I can't get the 'subfunction' to pass the verifier. This is my subfunction: define void @main_extern([8 x i8]* %arg_ptr) { entrypoint: %0 = getelementptr [8 x i8]* %arg_ptr, i32 0 %1 = bitcast [8 x i8]* %0 to i64* %2 = load i64* %1 %3 = getelementptr [8 x i8]* %arg_ptr, i32 1 %4 = bitcast [8 x i8]* %3 to i64* %5 = load i64* %4 %6 = getelementptr [8 x i8]* %arg_ptr, i32 2 %7 = bitcast [8 x i8]* %6 to float** %8 = load float** %7 %9 = getelementptr [8 x i8]* %arg_ptr, i32 3 %10 = bitcast [8 x i8]* %9 to float** %11 = load float** %10 %12 = getelementptr [8 x i8]* %arg_ptr, i32 4 %13 = bitcast [8 x i8]* %12 to float** %14 = load float** %13 call void @main(i64 %2, i64 %5, float* %8, float* %11, float* %14) ret void } Looks good to me. However the verify pass fails: /svn/llvm/include/llvm/Support/Casting.h:97: static bool llvm::isa_impl_cl<To, const From*>::doit(const From*) [with To = llvm::GlobalVariable; From = llvm::GlobalValue]: Assertion `Val && "isa<> used on a null pointer"' failed. I have no idea what this tries to tell me. Any idea? Frank On 28/10/13 15:27, Hal Finkel wrote:> ----- Original Message ----- >> Bingo! That works (when coming from C source) >> >> Now, I have a serious problem. I am not coming from C but I build the >> function with the builder. I am also forced to change the signature >> and >> load the pointers a,b,c afterwards: >> >> define void @bar([8 x i8]* nocapture readonly %arg_ptr) #0 { >> entrypoint: >> %0 = bitcast [8 x i8]* %arg_ptr to i32* >> %1 = load i32* %0, align 4 >> %2 = getelementptr [8 x i8]* %arg_ptr, i64 1 >> %3 = bitcast [8 x i8]* %2 to i32* >> %4 = load i32* %3, align 4 >> %5 = getelementptr [8 x i8]* %arg_ptr, i64 2 >> %6 = bitcast [8 x i8]* %5 to float** >> %7 = load float** %6, align 8 >> %8 = getelementptr [8 x i8]* %arg_ptr, i64 3 >> %9 = bitcast [8 x i8]* %8 to float** >> %10 = load float** %9, align 8 >> %11 = getelementptr [8 x i8]* %arg_ptr, i64 4 >> %12 = bitcast [8 x i8]* %11 to float** >> %13 = load float** %12, align 8 >> %14 = sext i32 %1 to i64 >> br label %L0 >> >> Now, these pointer (%7,%10,%13) are not qualified with 'restrict' and >> the loop vectorizer gives me the same message: >> >> LV: We can't vectorize because we can't find the array bounds. >> LV: Can't vectorize due to memory conflicts >> LV: Not vectorizing. >> >> I asked this a few days ago; now it comes up again: Is there a way to >> qualify a pointer/Value to be 'restrict'? > Currently, no. There will be work in that direction soon. You'll need to extract a sub-function so that you can put 'noalias' on the function arguments. > >> Another possible solution would be telling the loop vectorizer that >> it's >> safe to treat all arrays as disjunct. Is this possible? > Yes. Look for llvm.mem.parallel_loop_access in the language reference. > > -Hal > >> Frank >> >> >> >> >> On 28/10/13 15:11, Hal Finkel wrote: >>> ----- Original Message ----- >>>> I am trying to vectorize the function >>>> >>>> void bar(float *c, float *a, float *b) >>>> { >>>> const int width = 256; >>>> for (int i = 0 ; i < 256 ; ++i ) { >>>> c[ i ] = a[ i ] + b[ i ]; >>>> c[ width + i ] = a[ width + i ] + b[ width + i ]; >>>> } >>>> } >>>> >>>> using the following commands >>>> >>>> clang -emit-llvm -S loop.c >>>> opt loop.ll -O3 -debug-only=loop-vectorize -S -o - >>>> >>>> LV: Checking a loop in "bar" >>>> LV: Found a loop: for.body >>>> LV: Found an induction variable. >>>> LV: Found an unidentified write ptr: float* %c >>>> LV: Found an unidentified write ptr: float* %c >>>> LV: Found an unidentified read ptr: float* %a >>>> LV: Found an unidentified read ptr: float* %b >>>> LV: Found an unidentified read ptr: float* %a >>>> LV: Found an unidentified read ptr: float* %b >>>> LV: Found a runtime check ptr: %arrayidx4 = getelementptr >>>> inbounds >>>> float* %c, i64 %indvars.iv >>>> LV: Found a runtime check ptr: %arrayidx14 = getelementptr >>>> inbounds >>>> float* %c, i64 %2 >>>> LV: Found a runtime check ptr: %arrayidx = getelementptr inbounds >>>> float* %a, i64 %indvars.iv >>>> LV: Found a runtime check ptr: %arrayidx2 = getelementptr >>>> inbounds >>>> float* %b, i64 %indvars.iv >>>> LV: Found a runtime check ptr: %arrayidx7 = getelementptr >>>> inbounds >>>> float* %a, i64 %2 >>>> LV: Found a runtime check ptr: %arrayidx10 = getelementptr >>>> inbounds >>>> float* %b, i64 %2 >>>> LV: We need to do 10 pointer comparisons. >>>> LV: We can't vectorize because we can't find the array bounds. >>>> LV: Can't vectorize due to memory conflicts >>>> LV: Not vectorizing. >>>> >>>> Is there any chance to make this work? >>> Try adding the restrict keyword to the function parameters: >>> >>> void bar(float * restrict c, float * restrict a, float * restrict >>> b) >>> >>> -Hal >>> >>>> Frank >>>> >>>> _______________________________________________ >>>> LLVM Developers mailing list >>>> LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu >>>> http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev >>>> >> >>