Sameer Sahasrabuddhe
2015-Jan-09 04:48 UTC
[LLVMdev] [RFC][PATCH][OPENCL] synchronization scopes redux
On 1/9/2015 4:14 AM, Chandler Carruth wrote:> On Wed, Jan 7, 2015 at 8:03 PM, Sahasrabuddhe, Sameer > <sameer.sahasrabuddhe at amd.com <mailto:sameer.sahasrabuddhe at amd.com>> > wrote: > > Here's what this looks like to me: > > 1. LLVM text format will use string symbols for memory scopes, > and not numbers. The set of strings is target defined, but > "singlethread" and "system" are reserved and have a well-known > meaning. > > 2. "The keyword informally known as system" represents the set of > all threads that could possibly synchronize on the location > being accessed by the current atomic instruction. These > threads could be local, remote, executing on different agents, > or whatever else is admissible on that particular platform. We > still need to agree on the keyword to be used. > > 3. The bitcode will store memory scopes as unsigned integers, > since that is the easiest way to maintain compatibility. The > values 0 and 1 are special. All other values are meaningful > only within that bc file. The file will also provide a map > from unsigned integers to string symbols which should be used > to interpret all the non-standard integers. > 1. The map must not include 0 and 1, since the reader will > internally map them to singlethread" and "system" > respectively. > 2. If the map is empty or non-existent, then all non-zero > values will be mapped to "system", which is the current > behaviour. > > 4. The in-memory structure for an atomic instruction will > represent memory scope as a reference to a uniqued strings. > This eliminates any notion of performing arithmetic on the > scope indicator, or to write code that is sensitive to its > numerical value. > > 5. Behaviour is undefined if a symbolic scope used in the IR is > not supported by the target. This is true for "singlethread" > and "system" also, since some targets may not have those scopes. > > Is this correct? > > Generally, yes. > > Regarding the specific way of using strings, see the email I just sent > about metadata being used poorly, this is a place where we might use > metadata to encode the string, or we might do something more direct as > you propose. I think it would be good to do something like what I > propose in that thread to have nicely uniqued opaque string entities > in the IR, and then use them here for marking scopes.So I see the following large chunks of work that are difficult to isolate: 1. Modifying the bitcode and assembly readers and writers. 2. Updating Clang (simultaneously?) to generate the new kind of IR with symbol/number mappings. 3. Updating language bindings to deal with the new IR. As far as I can see, the following can be decoupled from the above, but they are closely tied to each other: 4. Implementing uniqued opaque strings in the most desirable way, and using it for the in-memory format. 5. Creating an interface to convert the opaque symbols into suitable target-specific DAG nodes. All this work, just to ensure readability in the LLVM text format. I am not entirely convinced that it is worth it, when opaque integers can get the job done just like address spaces ... are you?> But how does this work in the SelectionDAG? Also, what will this > look like in TableGen files? > > Not sure what you mean here? I haven't looked at implementing it, but > from the DAG down you should get to collapse this rapidly toward > target-specific nodes / structures / representations?Sorry, that was just me being lazy and not reading up on the SelectionDAG. I expect that we will translate the the symbols into integer TargetConstant SDNodes ... do you see the need to be more flexible than that? Sameer. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20150109/b3722ee9/attachment.html>
Sameer Sahasrabuddhe
2015-Jan-14 06:27 UTC
[LLVMdev] [RFC][PATCH][OPENCL] synchronization scopes redux
Ping! We need to close on whether everyone is convinced that symbolic memory scopes have a significant advantage over opaque numbers. Either of them will be examined by optimizations using a target-implemented API. I personally don't think that readability in the LLVM text format is worth the effort, especially given that address spaces work well enough with opaque numbers. Sameer. On 1/9/2015 10:18 AM, Sameer Sahasrabuddhe wrote:> > On 1/9/2015 4:14 AM, Chandler Carruth wrote: >> On Wed, Jan 7, 2015 at 8:03 PM, Sahasrabuddhe, Sameer >> <sameer.sahasrabuddhe at amd.com <mailto:sameer.sahasrabuddhe at amd.com>> >> wrote: >> >> Here's what this looks like to me: >> >> 1. LLVM text format will use string symbols for memory scopes, >> and not numbers. The set of strings is target defined, but >> "singlethread" and "system" are reserved and have a >> well-known meaning. >> >> 2. "The keyword informally known as system" represents the set >> of all threads that could possibly synchronize on the >> location being accessed by the current atomic instruction. >> These threads could be local, remote, executing on different >> agents, or whatever else is admissible on that particular >> platform. We still need to agree on the keyword to be used. >> >> 3. The bitcode will store memory scopes as unsigned integers, >> since that is the easiest way to maintain compatibility. The >> values 0 and 1 are special. All other values are meaningful >> only within that bc file. The file will also provide a map >> from unsigned integers to string symbols which should be used >> to interpret all the non-standard integers. >> 1. The map must not include 0 and 1, since the reader will >> internally map them to singlethread" and "system" >> respectively. >> 2. If the map is empty or non-existent, then all non-zero >> values will be mapped to "system", which is the current >> behaviour. >> >> 4. The in-memory structure for an atomic instruction will >> represent memory scope as a reference to a uniqued strings. >> This eliminates any notion of performing arithmetic on the >> scope indicator, or to write code that is sensitive to its >> numerical value. >> >> 5. Behaviour is undefined if a symbolic scope used in the IR is >> not supported by the target. This is true for "singlethread" >> and "system" also, since some targets may not have those scopes. >> >> Is this correct? >> >> Generally, yes. >> >> Regarding the specific way of using strings, see the email I just >> sent about metadata being used poorly, this is a place where we might >> use metadata to encode the string, or we might do something more >> direct as you propose. I think it would be good to do something like >> what I propose in that thread to have nicely uniqued opaque string >> entities in the IR, and then use them here for marking scopes. > > So I see the following large chunks of work that are difficult to isolate: > > 1. Modifying the bitcode and assembly readers and writers. > 2. Updating Clang (simultaneously?) to generate the new kind of IR > with symbol/number mappings. > 3. Updating language bindings to deal with the new IR. > > As far as I can see, the following can be decoupled from the above, > but they are closely tied to each other: > > 4. Implementing uniqued opaque strings in the most desirable way, and > using it for the in-memory format. > 5. Creating an interface to convert the opaque symbols into suitable > target-specific DAG nodes. > > All this work, just to ensure readability in the LLVM text format. I > am not entirely convinced that it is worth it, when opaque integers > can get the job done just like address spaces ... are you? > >> But how does this work in the SelectionDAG? Also, what will this >> look like in TableGen files? >> >> Not sure what you mean here? I haven't looked at implementing it, but >> from the DAG down you should get to collapse this rapidly toward >> target-specific nodes / structures / representations? > > Sorry, that was just me being lazy and not reading up on the > SelectionDAG. I expect that we will translate the the symbols into > integer TargetConstant SDNodes ... do you see the need to be more > flexible than that? > > Sameer.-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20150114/ee2ad0ed/attachment.html>
Chandler Carruth
2015-Jan-14 06:33 UTC
[LLVMdev] [RFC][PATCH][OPENCL] synchronization scopes redux
On Tue, Jan 13, 2015 at 10:27 PM, Sameer Sahasrabuddhe < sameer.sahasrabuddhe at amd.com> wrote:> Ping! We need to close on whether everyone is convinced that symbolic > memory scopes have a significant advantage over opaque numbers. Either of > them will be examined by optimizations using a target-implemented API. I > personally don't think that readability in the LLVM text format is worth > the effort, especially given that address spaces work well enough with > opaque numbers.I am much more comfortable with symbolic memory scopes. The reason I feel this way is actually because there *is* a particular ordering of them that the target will mandate. Having an ordering but having it *not* be the order of the numbers used seems too actively confusing to me. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20150113/c796958b/attachment.html>
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