Mehdi Amini via llvm-dev
2016-Oct-24 23:17 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: (Co-)Convergent functions and uniform function parameters
> On Oct 24, 2016, at 4:15 PM, Nicolai Hähnle <nhaehnle at gmail.com> wrote: > > On 25.10.2016 01:11, Nicolai Hähnle wrote: >> On 24.10.2016 21:54, Mehdi Amini wrote: >>>> On Oct 24, 2016, at 12:38 PM, Nicolai Hähnle via llvm-dev >>>> <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: >>>> Some brain-storming on an issue with SPMD/SIMT backend support where >>>> I think some additional IR attributes would be useful. Sorry for the >>>> somewhat long mail; the short version of my current thinking is that >>>> I would like to have the following: >>>> >>>> 1) convergent: a call to a function with this attribute cannot be >>>> moved to have additional control dependencies; i.e., moving it from A >>>> to B is only possible if B dominates or post-dominates A. >>>> >>>> 2) co-convergent (divergent? for lack of a better name...): a call to >>>> a function with this attribute cannot be moved to have _fewer_ >>>> control dependencies; i.e., moving it from A to B is only possible if >>>> A dominates or post-dominates B. >>>> >>>> 3) uniform (for function arguments): transformations are not allowed >>>> to introduce additional non-uniformity in this argument. >>> >>> Can you describe it in terms that are non-SPMD/SIMT? >>> I.e. I’m not sure that “uniformity” refers to an existing LLVM IR >>> concept. >> >> Yeah, that's actually the key problem I've been struggling with. >> >> The first example I sent shows the gist of it. It also shows that the >> concept can't be expressed in terms of the CFG, which makes this tricky. >> >> In a way it's the data-flow analog of the convergent attribute: the >> argument cannot be changed to have additional dependencies in its >> computation. That captures the basic intention, but I'm not completely >> sure that it works. > > One big question is whether there are transformations in LLVM today that replace a value %a with a value %b, where %b "has additional dependencies in its computation". I can't think of anything obvious where that would be the case, but I'm not sure.What do you mean by “additional dependencies in its computation" here? — Mehdi>>>> >>>> I'd appreciate input on this proposal, e.g. if this can be solved in >>>> an easier way or if there are obvious problems with this approach. >>>> >>>> Thanks, >>>> Nicolai >>>> >>>> .......... >>>> In a nutshell, the problem that this intends to solve is that: >>>> >>>> %v1 = texelFetch(%sampler, %coord0) >>>> %v2 = texelFetch(%sampler, %coord1) >>>> %v = select i1 %cond, vType %v1, %v2 >>>> >>>> is logically equivalent to and could benefit from being transformed to, >>>> >>>> %coord = select i1 %cond, cType %coord0, %coord1 >>>> %v = texelFetch(%sampler, %coord) >>>> >>>> but on the other hand >>>> >>>> %v1 = texelFetch(%sampler0, %coord) >>>> %v2 = texelFetch(%sampler1, %coord) >>>> %v = select i1 %cond, vType %v1, %v2 >>>> >>>> _must_not_ be transformed to >>>> >>>> %s = select i1 %cond, sType %sampler0, %sampler1 >>>> %v = texelFetch(%s, %coord) >>>> >>>> because of uniformity restrictions on the first argument of texelFetch. >>>> >>>> We currently have a shader that is mis-compiled in the wild because >>>> something much like the latter transform is done by SimplifyCFG.[1] >>>> There, the equivalent thing happens with phi nodes: >>>> >>>> if: >>>> %v.if = texelFetch(%sampler0, %coord) >>>> br label %end >>>> >>>> else: >>>> %v.else = texelFetch(%sampler1, %coord) >>>> br label %end >>>> >>>> end: >>>> %v = phi [ %v.if, %if ], [ %v.else, %else ] >>>> >>>> becomes >>>> >>>> ... >>>> end: >>>> %s = phi [ %sampler0, %if ], [ %sampler1, %else ] >>>> %v = texelFetch(%s, %coord) >>>> >>>> I have collected some more examples at [2] >>>> >>>> The distinctions between all three attribute types mentioned above >>>> makes sense, because there are OpenGL shader intrinsics that >>>> naturally carry almost all of the possible combinations of those >>>> attributes. >>>> >>>> That said, a pass that is not SPMD/SIMT-aware must treat every >>>> function call that has a uniform argument as if it were >>>> co-convergent, because the input to the uniform argument could have >>>> non-uniformity whose structure correlates with control dependencies; >>>> see [2] for an example. Furthermore, I have not yet found an >>>> operation that needs the co-convergent attribute without also having >>>> uniform arguments. So for the purposes of LLVM, it may be sufficient >>>> to add the 'uniform' attribute for function arguments. >>>> >>>> >>>> [1] https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=97988 >>>> [2] >>>> http://nhaehnle.blogspot.de/2016/10/compiling-shaders-dynamically-uniform.html >>>> >>>> _______________________________________________ >>>> LLVM Developers mailing list >>>> llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org >>>> http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >>>
Nicolai Hähnle via llvm-dev
2016-Oct-25 14:28 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: (Co-)Convergent functions and uniform function parameters
On 25.10.2016 01:17, Mehdi Amini wrote:> >> On Oct 24, 2016, at 4:15 PM, Nicolai Hähnle <nhaehnle at gmail.com> wrote: >> >> On 25.10.2016 01:11, Nicolai Hähnle wrote: >>> On 24.10.2016 21:54, Mehdi Amini wrote: >>>>> On Oct 24, 2016, at 12:38 PM, Nicolai Hähnle via llvm-dev >>>>> <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: >>>>> Some brain-storming on an issue with SPMD/SIMT backend support where >>>>> I think some additional IR attributes would be useful. Sorry for the >>>>> somewhat long mail; the short version of my current thinking is that >>>>> I would like to have the following: >>>>> >>>>> 1) convergent: a call to a function with this attribute cannot be >>>>> moved to have additional control dependencies; i.e., moving it from A >>>>> to B is only possible if B dominates or post-dominates A. >>>>> >>>>> 2) co-convergent (divergent? for lack of a better name...): a call to >>>>> a function with this attribute cannot be moved to have _fewer_ >>>>> control dependencies; i.e., moving it from A to B is only possible if >>>>> A dominates or post-dominates B. >>>>> >>>>> 3) uniform (for function arguments): transformations are not allowed >>>>> to introduce additional non-uniformity in this argument. >>>> >>>> Can you describe it in terms that are non-SPMD/SIMT? >>>> I.e. I’m not sure that “uniformity” refers to an existing LLVM IR >>>> concept. >>> >>> Yeah, that's actually the key problem I've been struggling with. >>> >>> The first example I sent shows the gist of it. It also shows that the >>> concept can't be expressed in terms of the CFG, which makes this tricky. >>> >>> In a way it's the data-flow analog of the convergent attribute: the >>> argument cannot be changed to have additional dependencies in its >>> computation. That captures the basic intention, but I'm not completely >>> sure that it works. >> >> One big question is whether there are transformations in LLVM today that replace a value %a with a value %b, where %b "has additional dependencies in its computation". I can't think of anything obvious where that would be the case, but I'm not sure. > > What do you mean by “additional dependencies in its computation" here?Minus phi-nodes, loads, and intrinsic calls, it could be: look at the directed graph where %a -> %b if %a is an operand of the instruction that defines %b. Take all nodes of that graph that do not have predecessors. But I fear that this path leads to eternal fuzziness. Let me try a completely different approach to define what we need by augmenting the semantics of IR with "divergence tokens". In addition to its usual value, every IR value carries a "divergence set" of divergence tokens. The basic rule is: the divergence set of a value is (at least) the union of the divergence sets of its operands. Every function input carries a unique divergence token. For phi-nodes, the divergence set also includes the branch conditions that can affect which predecessor value is taken. (A simpler, more conservative rule, would be to add a unique divergence token; this can be per-basic block.) Loads add a unique divergence token. (This is a very conservative rule mostly required for per-thread-allocas. It could be relaxed quite a bit by treating per-thread-memory like SSA-values augmented with divergence sets.) Atomic operations add a unique divergence token. Additional target-specific intrinsics may also add a divergence token. By transitivity, most function calls have to add a unique divergence token. The first restriction on the transformation of a call to a function with 'uniform' function argument is then: 1. The corresponding argument of the call can be changed only if the change preserves (or shrinks) the divergence set (on top of that, the new value obviously has to be equal to the old one in single threaded semantics). With this definition, def @fn(s0, s1, cond) { v0 = texelFetch(s0, ...) v1 = texelFetch(s1, ...) v = select i1 cond, v0, v1 } cannot be transformed to def @fn(s0, s1, cond) { s = select i1 cond, s0, s1 v = texelFetch(s, ...) } because s has a larger divergence set. On the other hand, at least the InstCombine transforms should all be safe because they locally transform a DAG of values in a way that can only shrink the set of predecessors of the locally transformed region of the DAG. Transforms that modify the CFG could be problematic especially with the simpler phi-node-rule, e.g. when a new basic block is created, you end up introducing new divergence tokens for "downstream" values. That's probably not a problem with the first definition for phi-nodes, though I'm not sure. ..... The above definition still allows the transformation of masked &= 1 if (masked == 1) { v1 = texelFetch(array[masked], ...) } else { v0 = texelFetch(array[masked], ...) } v = phi(v1, v0) to masked &= 1 v = texelFetch(array[masked], ...); which is incorrect. So for a set of divergence tokens D, let's say A D-dominates B if the following holds: there exists a way of fixing the branching directions of conditional branches whose condition's divergence set is disjoint from D, such that A dominates B in the resulting CFG. Similarly for D-post-domination. If D \subset D', then D'-domination implies D-domination. We can then formulate the second condition as: 2a. A function call with a uniform argument with divergence set D can be moved from location A to location B if A D-dominates or D-post-dominates B. 2b. Simpler but more conservatively, just treat the function call as co-convergent (i.e., it can only be moved to positions that are dominated or post-dominated by its current position in the usual sense.) ..... The full definition of D-domination is probably too involved to be turned into practical algorithms. But with this model of divergence sets, it should be possible to think of DivergenceAnalysis as an analysis that proves divergence sets of values to be empty (using additional target specific information to be less conservative). Combined with DivergenceAnalysis, (1)+(2a) still leave room for some useful and practical optimizations of functions with uniform arguments even across basic blocks. In practical terms for a first version, the effect of the attribute should just be to prevent the two transformations shown above. Thanks, Nicolai
Nicolai Hähnle via llvm-dev
2016-Oct-26 14:54 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: (Co-)Convergent functions and uniform function parameters
On 25.10.2016 16:28, Nicolai Hähnle wrote:> But I fear that this path leads to eternal fuzziness. Let me try a > completely different approach to define what we need by augmenting the > semantics of IR with "divergence tokens". In addition to its usual > value, every IR value carries a "divergence set" of divergence tokens. > > The basic rule is: the divergence set of a value is (at least) the union > of the divergence sets of its operands. > > Every function input carries a unique divergence token. > > For phi-nodes, the divergence set also includes the branch conditions > that can affect which predecessor value is taken. (A simpler, more > conservative rule, would be to add a unique divergence token; this can > be per-basic block.) > > Loads add a unique divergence token. (This is a very conservative rule > mostly required for per-thread-allocas. It could be relaxed quite a bit > by treating per-thread-memory like SSA-values augmented with divergence > sets.) > > Atomic operations add a unique divergence token. > > Additional target-specific intrinsics may also add a divergence token. > > By transitivity, most function calls have to add a unique divergence token. > > The first restriction on the transformation of a call to a function with > 'uniform' function argument is then: > > 1. The corresponding argument of the call can be changed only if the > change preserves (or shrinks) the divergence set (on top of that, the > new value obviously has to be equal to the old one in single threaded > semantics).Turns out that this isn't actually sufficient. Consider this (admittedly convoluted) example: idx = input & 1 v0 = texelFetch(s[idx & 0], ...) v1 = texelFetch(s[idx | 1], ...) cond = trunc idx to i1 v = select i1 cond, v1, v0 transformed into idx = in & 1 v = texelFetch(s[idx], ...) has the same divergence set for the argument to texelFetch as defined in the quote above, but the transformation is incorrect. So it's pretty clear what we want: We want a way to flag certain function arguments in a way that forbids transformations of the form select(call ... , call ...) -> call (select ..., ...), ... But it would be nice to have a clear definition of _why_ those transformations must be forbidden. It's not clear how to do that without pulling in a full model of SIMT-style parallel execution, and admittedly I don't think we have a sane model for _that_ in the first place :-( Something that at least partially addresses the SIMT-style semantics: For every pair (initial state, function inputs) and every call site of the relevant function, keep a log of function arguments with which the function has been called. The restriction on program transformations is roughly: two pairs A and B of (initial state, function inputs) are compatible when run on the original program if at each call site the log of A is a subsequence of the log of B or vice versa. Then every pair A,B that is compatible when run on the original program must also be compatible on the transformed program. This isn't a great definition either, but it gets closer to the actual SIMT-semantics. Any additional ideas would be very much appreciated. Thanks, Nicolai> > With this definition, > > def @fn(s0, s1, cond) { > v0 = texelFetch(s0, ...) > v1 = texelFetch(s1, ...) > v = select i1 cond, v0, v1 > } > > cannot be transformed to > > def @fn(s0, s1, cond) { > s = select i1 cond, s0, s1 > v = texelFetch(s, ...) > } > > because s has a larger divergence set. > > On the other hand, at least the InstCombine transforms should all be > safe because they locally transform a DAG of values in a way that can > only shrink the set of predecessors of the locally transformed region of > the DAG. > > Transforms that modify the CFG could be problematic especially with the > simpler phi-node-rule, e.g. when a new basic block is created, you end > up introducing new divergence tokens for "downstream" values. That's > probably not a problem with the first definition for phi-nodes, though > I'm not sure. > > ..... > The above definition still allows the transformation of > > masked &= 1 > if (masked == 1) { > v1 = texelFetch(array[masked], ...) > } else { > v0 = texelFetch(array[masked], ...) > } > v = phi(v1, v0) > > to > > masked &= 1 > v = texelFetch(array[masked], ...); > > which is incorrect. So for a set of divergence tokens D, let's say A > D-dominates B if the following holds: there exists a way of fixing the > branching directions of conditional branches whose condition's > divergence set is disjoint from D, such that A dominates B in the > resulting CFG. Similarly for D-post-domination. > > If D \subset D', then D'-domination implies D-domination. > > We can then formulate the second condition as: > > 2a. A function call with a uniform argument with divergence set D can be > moved from location A to location B if A D-dominates or D-post-dominates B. > > 2b. Simpler but more conservatively, just treat the function call as > co-convergent (i.e., it can only be moved to positions that are > dominated or post-dominated by its current position in the usual sense.) > > ..... > The full definition of D-domination is probably too involved to be > turned into practical algorithms. But with this model of divergence > sets, it should be possible to think of DivergenceAnalysis as an > analysis that proves divergence sets of values to be empty (using > additional target specific information to be less conservative). > Combined with DivergenceAnalysis, (1)+(2a) still leave room for some > useful and practical optimizations of functions with uniform arguments > even across basic blocks. > > In practical terms for a first version, the effect of the attribute > should just be to prevent the two transformations shown above. > > Thanks, > Nicolai
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