> Can you suggest a good way to use the loops and induction variable
> passes to map loop exiting BasicBlocks to InductionVariables. That is,
> can we use these tools to identify the loop condition.
I can try. :) It looks like you're running into problems because we
don't perform "Linear Function Test Replacement". This
optimization would
reduce the amount of code which occurs between the induction variable and
the final comparison for exiting the loop. For example, we currently
transform this:
i = 5;
do {
i = i + 1;
} while (i < 10);
into this:
i = 0;
do {
i = i + 1;
} while (i+5 < 10);
... instead of into: while (i < 5);
This means the correlating the branch conditions back to the induction
variables may be fairly difficult. Also, we don't compute "trip
count"
which would be useful to you as well.
> What i have tried
> Function Pass:
> foreach BB
> if(terminal is loop exit of containing loop)
> trace back to instruction producing the cond that the
> branch branches on - condProducer
> foreach(inst in loop header)
> if(isa PHI )
> if(PHI uses condProducer)
> Run InductionVariables on this PHI Loop pair,
> save result
That is reasonable. If it were me, I would structure it like this:
Function Pass:
postorder traverse the loop nesting tree
for each loop
If the first PHI node in the header block for the loop is
recognizable as an induction variable...
for each exit block
find predecessor in loop
look at the terminator, see if it uses the indvar.
This uses the fact that the induction variable cannonicalization pass
guarantees that the cannonical induction variable will be the first phi
node in the header block, if there is one. Otherwise it's not too
different. You can use any traversal of the loop nesting tree, but
my analyses and transformations want to do the "more nested" loops
before
the outer loops.
> Problems I have encountered:
> Often the induction variable is stored in memory,
> --basicaa --ds-aa --steens-aa -aa-eval --licm --indvars doesn't seems
to
> help much. in fact it worsens the rates at which induction variables
> are found because of the new code inserted.
> Often the branch instruction uses a value where we must go backward
> through several instructions to find the "true" induction
variable
> name.
I am definately interested in this, and I consider this to be a problem.
How are you compiling the code? Are you using the output of llvmgcc -c as
a starting point? If so, something like this should work well:
opt -reassociate -licm -indvars
If you are still seeing induction variables stuck in memory, I would be
_VERY_ interested in seeing small testcases that demonstrate this (off
list though).
> I guess the basis of my problem is my mapping loop exit block to PHI
> nodes is too fragile for the general case. Perhaps I am doing this the
> wrong way. Should I simply examine every PHI node in the loop header
> and then determine if the value is eventually used in an exit block's
> branch?
As I mentioned above, this is the way I would do it. You are guaranteed
that you only have to look at the first phi node in the loop header, and
doing it this way should be more efficient (you only have to look at loop
exit blocks, not every block in the function).
That said, if you are seeing complex expressions between the exit
condition and the induction variable, perhaps linear function test
replacement would help. If so, it would probably be easier to implement
that than to put a lot of smarts into your follow-on analysis, which would
have to recognize things anyways. I suspect that what you _really_ want
to know is the trip count of the loop, and this is the right way to
compute it IMO. Others may have other opinions of course. :)
-Chris
--
http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu/
http://www.nondot.org/~sabre/Projects/