Duncan Sands
2011-Feb-07 13:37 UTC
[LLVMdev] A small pass to constant fold branch conditions in destination blocks
Hi Jeff,> Are you sure this is really advantageous? '%c' is only one variable, but when > you add the constant propagation, '%c' and false/true are two different > variables. Thusthe example was explanatory, not typical. In fact I didn't ever see returns being split like this in practice. What I do see typically is branches being eliminated. For example, consider the effect on bzip2: 36 branches are completely removed, 1 is changed from conditional to unconditional, various bits of dead code are eliminated (not a lot, 4 stores and a few computations). I chose this example randomly, but it's typical of what I see elsewhere. Ciao, Duncan.> > define i1 @t1(i1 %c) { > br i1 %c, label %t, label %f > t: > ret i1 %c > f: > ret i1 %c > } > should be > br i1 R0, label %t, label %f > t: > ret R0 > f: > ret R0 > > However, with your pass > define i1 @t1(i1 %c) { > br i1 %c, label %t, label %f > t: > ret i1 true > f: > ret i1 false > } > will be > define i1 @t1(i1 %c) { > br i1 R0, label %t, label %f > t: > R1 = true > ret i1 R1 > f: > R1 = false > ret i1 R1 > } > > I am thinking X86 where '%c' would be allocated a register and the false/true > statement would be allocated a different register which would be EAX/AX on the > x86 machine. > > Honestly, I believe this pattern could be conditional constant propagation > / conditional re-materialization in the spiller. LLVM uses the spiller to > propagate constants. This pass would be useful to identify some conditional > re-materializations. You should look into hacking the spiller and see if this > can be added to it. > > - My 2 cents, > Jeff Kunkel > > On Mon, Feb 7, 2011 at 7:50 AM, Duncan Sands <baldrick at free.fr > <mailto:baldrick at free.fr>> wrote: > > Hi all, I wrote a little pass (attached) which does the following: if it sees a > conditional branch instruction then it replaces all occurrences of the condition > in the true block with "true" and in the false block with "false". Well, OK, it > is a bit more sophisticated (and a bit more careful!) than that but you get the > idea. It will turn this > define i1 @t1(i1 %c) { > br i1 %c, label %t, label %f > t: > ret i1 %c > f: > ret i1 %c > } > into this > define i1 @t1(i1 %c) { > br i1 %c, label %t, label %f > t: > ret i1 true > f: > ret i1 false > } > for example. Curiously enough LLVM doesn't seem to have a pass that does this. > I took a look at the effect on the testsuite by scheduling a run of this pass > just after each run of -correlated-propagation. In spite of being so simple > (not to say simplistic) it has an enormous positive impact on Ada code and a > substantial positive impact throughout the LLVM test-suite (I didn't check that > programs still work after running the pass, so it could be that it has such a > big effect because it is wrong!). > > So... should this kind of logic be incorporated into LLVM? Perhaps as part of > an existing pass like -correlated-propagation? > > It would be easy to make the pass a bit more powerful. For example if the > condition was "X == 0" then it could also replace X with 0 everywhere in the > true block. > > Ciao, Duncan. > > PS: This was inspired by PR9004. > > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu <mailto:LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu> http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu > http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev > >
Jeff Kunkel
2011-Feb-07 13:49 UTC
[LLVMdev] A small pass to constant fold branch conditions in destination blocks
Then I misunderstood it's purpose. I see now that constant propagation could remove branches because you know a value is true. I was looking at the problem through my 'register allocator' lens. Here is a more expressive example of what you are doing. define i1 @t1(i1 %c) { br i1 %c, label %t, label %f t: br i1 %c, label %t2, label %f2 t2: code... ret something f2: code... ret something f: br i1 %c, label %t3, label %f3 t3: code... ret something f3: code... ret something } Would be changed into: define i1 @t1(i1 %c) { br i1 %c, label %t2, label %f3 t2: code... ret something f3: code... ret something } Jeff Kunkel On Mon, Feb 7, 2011 at 8:37 AM, Duncan Sands <baldrick at free.fr> wrote:> Hi Jeff, > > > Are you sure this is really advantageous? '%c' is only one variable, but >> when >> you add the constant propagation, '%c' and false/true are two different >> variables. Thus >> > > the example was explanatory, not typical. In fact I didn't ever see > returns > being split like this in practice. What I do see typically is branches > being eliminated. For example, consider the effect on bzip2: 36 branches > are > completely removed, 1 is changed from conditional to unconditional, various > bits of dead code are eliminated (not a lot, 4 stores and a few > computations). > I chose this example randomly, but it's typical of what I see elsewhere. > > Ciao, Duncan. > > > >> define i1 @t1(i1 %c) { >> br i1 %c, label %t, label %f >> t: >> ret i1 %c >> f: >> ret i1 %c >> } >> should be >> br i1 R0, label %t, label %f >> t: >> ret R0 >> f: >> ret R0 >> >> However, with your pass >> define i1 @t1(i1 %c) { >> br i1 %c, label %t, label %f >> t: >> ret i1 true >> f: >> ret i1 false >> } >> will be >> define i1 @t1(i1 %c) { >> br i1 R0, label %t, label %f >> t: >> R1 = true >> ret i1 R1 >> f: >> R1 = false >> ret i1 R1 >> } >> >> I am thinking X86 where '%c' would be allocated a register and the >> false/true >> statement would be allocated a different register which would be EAX/AX on >> the >> x86 machine. >> >> Honestly, I believe this pattern could be conditional constant propagation >> / conditional re-materialization in the spiller. LLVM uses the spiller to >> propagate constants. This pass would be useful to identify some >> conditional >> re-materializations. You should look into hacking the spiller and see if >> this >> can be added to it. >> >> - My 2 cents, >> Jeff Kunkel >> >> On Mon, Feb 7, 2011 at 7:50 AM, Duncan Sands <baldrick at free.fr >> <mailto:baldrick at free.fr>> wrote: >> >> Hi all, I wrote a little pass (attached) which does the following: if >> it sees a >> conditional branch instruction then it replaces all occurrences of the >> condition >> in the true block with "true" and in the false block with "false". >> Well, OK, it >> is a bit more sophisticated (and a bit more careful!) than that but you >> get the >> idea. It will turn this >> define i1 @t1(i1 %c) { >> br i1 %c, label %t, label %f >> t: >> ret i1 %c >> f: >> ret i1 %c >> } >> into this >> define i1 @t1(i1 %c) { >> br i1 %c, label %t, label %f >> t: >> ret i1 true >> f: >> ret i1 false >> } >> for example. Curiously enough LLVM doesn't seem to have a pass that >> does this. >> I took a look at the effect on the testsuite by scheduling a run of >> this pass >> just after each run of -correlated-propagation. In spite of being so >> simple >> (not to say simplistic) it has an enormous positive impact on Ada code >> and a >> substantial positive impact throughout the LLVM test-suite (I didn't >> check that >> programs still work after running the pass, so it could be that it has >> such a >> big effect because it is wrong!). >> >> So... should this kind of logic be incorporated into LLVM? Perhaps as >> part of >> an existing pass like -correlated-propagation? >> >> It would be easy to make the pass a bit more powerful. For example if >> the >> condition was "X == 0" then it could also replace X with 0 everywhere >> in the >> true block. >> >> Ciao, Duncan. >> >> PS: This was inspired by PR9004. >> >> _______________________________________________ >> LLVM Developers mailing list >> LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu <mailto:LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu> >> http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu >> >> http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev >> >> >> >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20110207/54394dc4/attachment.html>
Duncan Sands
2011-Feb-07 13:57 UTC
[LLVMdev] A small pass to constant fold branch conditions in destination blocks
Hi Jeff, sorry my example was misleading.> Then I misunderstood it's purpose. I see now that constant propagation could > remove branches because you know a value is true. I was looking at the problem > through my 'register allocator' lens. Here is a more expressive example of what > you are doing. > > define i1 @t1(i1 %c) { > br i1 %c, label %t, label %f > t: > br i1 %c, label %t2, label %f2 > t2: > code... > ret something > f2: > code... > ret something > > f: > br i1 %c, label %t3, label %f3 > t3: > code... > ret something > f3: > code... > ret something > } > > Would be changed into: > define i1 @t1(i1 %c) { > br i1 %c, label %t2, label %f3 > t2: > code... > ret something > f3: > code... > ret something > }Yes that's exactly what it would do, and this happens a lot in practice. The reason that it fires a lot in Ada code for example if that the code is full of compiler generated checks (eg: every array access is checked) and the checks often end up being repeated (eg: because you access the same array element twice). Now all the later checks are eliminated if they are implied by the earlier checks. Ciao, Duncan.> > Jeff Kunkel > On Mon, Feb 7, 2011 at 8:37 AM, Duncan Sands <baldrick at free.fr > <mailto:baldrick at free.fr>> wrote: > > Hi Jeff, > > > Are you sure this is really advantageous? '%c' is only one variable, but > when > you add the constant propagation, '%c' and false/true are two different > variables. Thus > > > the example was explanatory, not typical. In fact I didn't ever see returns > being split like this in practice. What I do see typically is branches > being eliminated. For example, consider the effect on bzip2: 36 branches are > completely removed, 1 is changed from conditional to unconditional, various > bits of dead code are eliminated (not a lot, 4 stores and a few computations). > I chose this example randomly, but it's typical of what I see elsewhere. > > Ciao, Duncan. > > > > define i1 @t1(i1 %c) { > br i1 %c, label %t, label %f > t: > ret i1 %c > f: > ret i1 %c > } > should be > br i1 R0, label %t, label %f > t: > ret R0 > f: > ret R0 > > However, with your pass > define i1 @t1(i1 %c) { > br i1 %c, label %t, label %f > t: > ret i1 true > f: > ret i1 false > } > will be > define i1 @t1(i1 %c) { > br i1 R0, label %t, label %f > t: > R1 = true > ret i1 R1 > f: > R1 = false > ret i1 R1 > } > > I am thinking X86 where '%c' would be allocated a register and the > false/true > statement would be allocated a different register which would be EAX/AX > on the > x86 machine. > > Honestly, I believe this pattern could be conditional constant propagation > / conditional re-materialization in the spiller. LLVM uses the spiller to > propagate constants. This pass would be useful to identify some conditional > re-materializations. You should look into hacking the spiller and see if > this > can be added to it. > > - My 2 cents, > Jeff Kunkel > > On Mon, Feb 7, 2011 at 7:50 AM, Duncan Sands <baldrick at free.fr > <mailto:baldrick at free.fr> > <mailto:baldrick at free.fr <mailto:baldrick at free.fr>>> wrote: > > Hi all, I wrote a little pass (attached) which does the following: > if it sees a > conditional branch instruction then it replaces all occurrences of > the condition > in the true block with "true" and in the false block with "false". > Well, OK, it > is a bit more sophisticated (and a bit more careful!) than that but > you get the > idea. It will turn this > define i1 @t1(i1 %c) { > br i1 %c, label %t, label %f > t: > ret i1 %c > f: > ret i1 %c > } > into this > define i1 @t1(i1 %c) { > br i1 %c, label %t, label %f > t: > ret i1 true > f: > ret i1 false > } > for example. Curiously enough LLVM doesn't seem to have a pass that > does this. > I took a look at the effect on the testsuite by scheduling a run of > this pass > just after each run of -correlated-propagation. In spite of being > so simple > (not to say simplistic) it has an enormous positive impact on Ada > code and a > substantial positive impact throughout the LLVM test-suite (I didn't > check that > programs still work after running the pass, so it could be that it > has such a > big effect because it is wrong!). > > So... should this kind of logic be incorporated into LLVM? Perhaps > as part of > an existing pass like -correlated-propagation? > > It would be easy to make the pass a bit more powerful. For example > if the > condition was "X == 0" then it could also replace X with 0 > everywhere in the > true block. > > Ciao, Duncan. > > PS: This was inspired by PR9004. > > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu <mailto:LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu> > <mailto:LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu <mailto:LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu>> > http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu > > http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev > > > >
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