Duncan P. N. Exon Smith via llvm-dev
2016-Sep-24 22:06 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: ConstantData should not have use-lists
r261464 added a type called ConstantData to the Value hierarchy. This is a parent type for constants with no operands, such as i32 0 and null. Since then, I've removed most instances of iterating through the use-lists of an instance of ConstantData. I'd like to make this illegal. Since the users of ConstantData are spread across an LLVMContext, most code that looks at the users is wrong. Adding an assertion should catch a lot of bugs (see r263853 and r263875) and avoid some expensive walks through uninteresting code. (The same is not true of Constant, generally. A GlobalValue's use-list will local to the GlobalValue's Module. Any ConstantVector, ConstantArray, or ConstantStruct that points at a GlobalValue will also be local to the same Module. In these cases, we also need RAUW support.) Besides catching bugs, removing use-lists from ConstantData will guarantee that the compiler output *does not* depend on the use-list order of something like i32 0. Finally, this should dramatically reduce the overhead of serializing use-list order in bitcode. We will no longer track the arbitrary order of references to things like i32 0 and null. What's left? =========== I just filed PR30513 to track remaining work. 1. Avoid the remaining uses of ConstantData use-lists. There are only a couple of cases left, highlighted in the WIP HACK patches attached below (0001 and 0002). 2. Remove the use-lists! Replace them with ref-counts to keep most of the use-list API functional (and minimize the size of the change). See the WIP patch below (0003). 3. (Optional) Remove use-lists from other non-GlobalValue Constants that do not reference any GlobalValues. This would require some sort of magic in, e.g., ConstantVector to conditionally have a use-list. Call sites of API like Value::use_begin would have to check for Value::hasUseList. 4. (Optional) Remove the ref-count from ConstantData (and, potentially, other use-list-free Constants). This would eliminate ref-count traffic, but would also require checking at call sites before using any use-list-related API. Feedback ======= - Does anyone disagree with this general direction? Why? - Any thoughts on #3? - Any thoughts on #4? -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: 0001-WIP-HACK-SimplifyLibCalls-Disable-optimizeSinCosPi-o.patch Type: application/octet-stream Size: 1883 bytes Desc: not available URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20160924/0b518b96/attachment.obj> -------------- next part -------------- -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: 0002-WIP-HACK-LICM-Ignore-stores-to-UndefValue-and-Consta.patch Type: application/octet-stream Size: 2231 bytes Desc: not available URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20160924/0b518b96/attachment-0001.obj> -------------- next part -------------- -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: 0003-WIP-IR-Remove-use-lists-from-ConstantData.patch Type: application/octet-stream Size: 18252 bytes Desc: not available URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20160924/0b518b96/attachment-0002.obj>
Mehdi Amini via llvm-dev
2016-Sep-24 22:16 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: ConstantData should not have use-lists
> On Sep 24, 2016, at 3:06 PM, Duncan P. N. Exon Smith via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > > r261464 added a type called ConstantData to the Value hierarchy. This > is a parent type for constants with no operands, such as i32 0 and null. > > Since then, I've removed most instances of iterating through the > use-lists of an instance of ConstantData. I'd like to make this > illegal. Since the users of ConstantData are spread across an > LLVMContext, most code that looks at the users is wrong. Adding an > assertion should catch a lot of bugs (see r263853 and r263875) and > avoid some expensive walks through uninteresting code. > > (The same is not true of Constant, generally. A GlobalValue's use-list > will local to the GlobalValue's Module. Any ConstantVector, > ConstantArray, or ConstantStruct that points at a GlobalValue will also > be local to the same Module. In these cases, we also need RAUW > support.) > > Besides catching bugs, removing use-lists from ConstantData will > guarantee that the compiler output *does not* depend on the use-list > order of something like i32 0. > > Finally, this should dramatically reduce the overhead of serializing > use-list order in bitcode. We will no longer track the arbitrary > order of references to things like i32 0 and null. > > What's left? > ===========> > I just filed PR30513 to track remaining work. > > 1. Avoid the remaining uses of ConstantData use-lists. There are only > a couple of cases left, highlighted in the WIP HACK patches attached > below (0001 and 0002). > > 2. Remove the use-lists! Replace them with ref-counts to keep most of > the use-list API functional (and minimize the size of the change). > See the WIP patch below (0003). > > 3. (Optional) Remove use-lists from other non-GlobalValue Constants > that do not reference any GlobalValues. This would require some > sort of magic in, e.g., ConstantVector to conditionally have a > use-list.I wonder if the constant class hierarchy should not be revisited in light of this? For instance you identified that some are local to a module while others are “context-wide”. I haven’t given too much thoughts about this, but I'm curious if you did? — Mehdi> Call sites of API like Value::use_begin would have to > check for Value::hasUseList. > > 4. (Optional) Remove the ref-count from ConstantData (and, potentially, > other use-list-free Constants). This would eliminate ref-count > traffic, but would also require checking at call sites before using > any use-list-related API. > > Feedback > =======> > - Does anyone disagree with this general direction? Why? > - Any thoughts on #3? > - Any thoughts on #4? > > <0001-WIP-HACK-SimplifyLibCalls-Disable-optimizeSinCosPi-o.patch> > <0002-WIP-HACK-LICM-Ignore-stores-to-UndefValue-and-Consta.patch> > <0003-WIP-IR-Remove-use-lists-from-ConstantData.patch>_______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith via llvm-dev
2016-Sep-24 23:39 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: ConstantData should not have use-lists
> On 2016-Sep-24, at 15:16, Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini at apple.com> wrote: > >> >> On Sep 24, 2016, at 3:06 PM, Duncan P. N. Exon Smith via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: >> >> r261464 added a type called ConstantData to the Value hierarchy. This >> is a parent type for constants with no operands, such as i32 0 and null. >> >> Since then, I've removed most instances of iterating through the >> use-lists of an instance of ConstantData. I'd like to make this >> illegal. Since the users of ConstantData are spread across an >> LLVMContext, most code that looks at the users is wrong. Adding an >> assertion should catch a lot of bugs (see r263853 and r263875) and >> avoid some expensive walks through uninteresting code. >> >> (The same is not true of Constant, generally. A GlobalValue's use-list >> will local to the GlobalValue's Module. Any ConstantVector, >> ConstantArray, or ConstantStruct that points at a GlobalValue will also >> be local to the same Module. In these cases, we also need RAUW >> support.) >> >> Besides catching bugs, removing use-lists from ConstantData will >> guarantee that the compiler output *does not* depend on the use-list >> order of something like i32 0. >> >> Finally, this should dramatically reduce the overhead of serializing >> use-list order in bitcode. We will no longer track the arbitrary >> order of references to things like i32 0 and null. >> >> What's left? >> ===========>> >> I just filed PR30513 to track remaining work. >> >> 1. Avoid the remaining uses of ConstantData use-lists. There are only >> a couple of cases left, highlighted in the WIP HACK patches attached >> below (0001 and 0002). >> >> 2. Remove the use-lists! Replace them with ref-counts to keep most of >> the use-list API functional (and minimize the size of the change). >> See the WIP patch below (0003). >> >> 3. (Optional) Remove use-lists from other non-GlobalValue Constants >> that do not reference any GlobalValues. This would require some >> sort of magic in, e.g., ConstantVector to conditionally have a >> use-list. > > I wonder if the constant class hierarchy should not be revisited in light of this? > For instance you identified that some are local to a module while others are “context-wide”. > > I haven’t given too much thoughts about this, but I'm curious if you did?You mean something like PureConstantVector (which cannot transitively reference GlobalValue) vs ConstantVectorWithGlobalRef (which can/must transitively reference GlobalValue), right? (And also for ConstantStruct, ConstantArray, and ConstantExpr, etc.) I hadn't considered that, and it seems worth thinking about. I'm unsure whether using isa<>() would really be cleaner than using Value::hasUseList; and it would certainly be intrusive. Do you see any concrete benefits? One possible long-term thing (after #4)... we could add ConstantDataUser (vs. User), which can only reference a Constant-with-no-GlobalValue, and has operands the size of a pointer. Obviously nice to save on operand-size, but I'm not convinced it would save sufficient memory to be worthwhile: IIRC, Instruction accounts for most instances of User.> — > Mehdi > > >> Call sites of API like Value::use_begin would have to >> check for Value::hasUseList. >> >> 4. (Optional) Remove the ref-count from ConstantData (and, potentially, >> other use-list-free Constants). This would eliminate ref-count >> traffic, but would also require checking at call sites before using >> any use-list-related API. >> >> Feedback >> =======>> >> - Does anyone disagree with this general direction? Why? >> - Any thoughts on #3? >> - Any thoughts on #4? >> >> <0001-WIP-HACK-SimplifyLibCalls-Disable-optimizeSinCosPi-o.patch> >> <0002-WIP-HACK-LICM-Ignore-stores-to-UndefValue-and-Consta.patch> >> <0003-WIP-IR-Remove-use-lists-from-ConstantData.patch>_______________________________________________ >> LLVM Developers mailing list >> llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org >> http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev
Vedant Kumar via llvm-dev
2016-Sep-26 16:02 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: ConstantData should not have use-lists
> On Sep 24, 2016, at 3:06 PM, Duncan P. N. Exon Smith <dexonsmith at apple.com> wrote: > > r261464 added a type called ConstantData to the Value hierarchy. This > is a parent type for constants with no operands, such as i32 0 and null. > > Since then, I've removed most instances of iterating through the > use-lists of an instance of ConstantData. I'd like to make this > illegal. Since the users of ConstantData are spread across an > LLVMContext, most code that looks at the users is wrong. Adding an > assertion should catch a lot of bugs (see r263853 and r263875) and > avoid some expensive walks through uninteresting code. > > (The same is not true of Constant, generally. A GlobalValue's use-list > will local to the GlobalValue's Module. Any ConstantVector, > ConstantArray, or ConstantStruct that points at a GlobalValue will also > be local to the same Module. In these cases, we also need RAUW > support.) > > Besides catching bugs, removing use-lists from ConstantData will > guarantee that the compiler output *does not* depend on the use-list > order of something like i32 0. > > Finally, this should dramatically reduce the overhead of serializing > use-list order in bitcode. We will no longer track the arbitrary > order of references to things like i32 0 and null. > > What's left? > ===========> > I just filed PR30513 to track remaining work. > > 1. Avoid the remaining uses of ConstantData use-lists. There are only > a couple of cases left, highlighted in the WIP HACK patches attached > below (0001 and 0002). > > 2. Remove the use-lists! Replace them with ref-counts to keep most of > the use-list API functional (and minimize the size of the change). > See the WIP patch below (0003). > > 3. (Optional) Remove use-lists from other non-GlobalValue Constants > that do not reference any GlobalValues. This would require some > sort of magic in, e.g., ConstantVector to conditionally have a > use-list. Call sites of API like Value::use_begin would have to > check for Value::hasUseList.Could you explain why #3 requires checking for hasListList() or e.g isa<ConstantVectorWithGlobalRef>() before calling use_begin()?> 4. (Optional) Remove the ref-count from ConstantData (and, potentially, > other use-list-free Constants). This would eliminate ref-count > traffic, but would also require checking at call sites before using > any use-list-related API. > > Feedback > =======> > - Does anyone disagree with this general direction? Why? > - Any thoughts on #3? > - Any thoughts on #4? > > <0001-WIP-HACK-SimplifyLibCalls-Disable-optimizeSinCosPi-o.patch> > <0002-WIP-HACK-LICM-Ignore-stores-to-UndefValue-and-Consta.patch> > <0003-WIP-IR-Remove-use-lists-from-ConstantData.patch>We should probably improve the use-list-order2.ll test instead of deleting it. I've attached a patch to PR24755 which might help with this ("Improve use-list order testing for function operands"). I think the test should fail if its uses of ConstantData are replaced by e.g personality functions. vedant
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith via llvm-dev
2016-Sep-26 16:22 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: ConstantData should not have use-lists
> On 2016-Sep-26, at 09:02, Vedant Kumar <vsk at apple.com> wrote: > >> >> On Sep 24, 2016, at 3:06 PM, Duncan P. N. Exon Smith <dexonsmith at apple.com> wrote: >> >> r261464 added a type called ConstantData to the Value hierarchy. This >> is a parent type for constants with no operands, such as i32 0 and null. >> >> Since then, I've removed most instances of iterating through the >> use-lists of an instance of ConstantData. I'd like to make this >> illegal. Since the users of ConstantData are spread across an >> LLVMContext, most code that looks at the users is wrong. Adding an >> assertion should catch a lot of bugs (see r263853 and r263875) and >> avoid some expensive walks through uninteresting code. >> >> (The same is not true of Constant, generally. A GlobalValue's use-list >> will local to the GlobalValue's Module. Any ConstantVector, >> ConstantArray, or ConstantStruct that points at a GlobalValue will also >> be local to the same Module. In these cases, we also need RAUW >> support.) >> >> Besides catching bugs, removing use-lists from ConstantData will >> guarantee that the compiler output *does not* depend on the use-list >> order of something like i32 0. >> >> Finally, this should dramatically reduce the overhead of serializing >> use-list order in bitcode. We will no longer track the arbitrary >> order of references to things like i32 0 and null. >> >> What's left? >> ===========>> >> I just filed PR30513 to track remaining work. >> >> 1. Avoid the remaining uses of ConstantData use-lists. There are only >> a couple of cases left, highlighted in the WIP HACK patches attached >> below (0001 and 0002). >> >> 2. Remove the use-lists! Replace them with ref-counts to keep most of >> the use-list API functional (and minimize the size of the change). >> See the WIP patch below (0003). >> >> 3. (Optional) Remove use-lists from other non-GlobalValue Constants >> that do not reference any GlobalValues. This would require some >> sort of magic in, e.g., ConstantVector to conditionally have a >> use-list. Call sites of API like Value::use_begin would have to >> check for Value::hasUseList. > > Could you explain why #3 requires checking for hasListList() or e.g > isa<ConstantVectorWithGlobalRef>() before calling use_begin()?Same reason #2 (WIP patch 0003) requires isa<ConstantData> or Value::hasUseList before calling use_begin. Accessing Value::use_begin and Value::use_end means that the call site is trying to walk through the use-list. Since we don't track the use-list for ConstantData, any call site that's inferring something from an empty-looking use-list will have a bug. IIRC, 0003 changes Value::use_begin and Value::use_end to assert that Value::hasUseList; if it doesn't, it should.>> 4. (Optional) Remove the ref-count from ConstantData (and, potentially, >> other use-list-free Constants). This would eliminate ref-count >> traffic, but would also require checking at call sites before using >> any use-list-related API. >> >> Feedback >> =======>> >> - Does anyone disagree with this general direction? Why? >> - Any thoughts on #3? >> - Any thoughts on #4? >> >> <0001-WIP-HACK-SimplifyLibCalls-Disable-optimizeSinCosPi-o.patch> >> <0002-WIP-HACK-LICM-Ignore-stores-to-UndefValue-and-Consta.patch> >> <0003-WIP-IR-Remove-use-lists-from-ConstantData.patch> > > We should probably improve the use-list-order2.ll test instead of deleting it. > I've attached a patch to PR24755 which might help with this ("Improve use-list > order testing for function operands"). I think the test should fail if its uses > of ConstantData are replaced by e.g personality functions.Agreed. Thanks for the patch.
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