Kristof Beyls via llvm-dev
2017-Apr-03 15:10 UTC
[llvm-dev] [GlobalISel][AArch64] Toward flipping the switch for O0: Please give it a try!
I've kicked off a run to compare "-O0 -g" versus "-O0 -g -mllvm -global-isel -mllvm -global-isel-abort=2". I've selected the test-suite (albeit a version which is a couple of months old now) and a few short-running proprietary benchmarks to get data back quickly for an initial feel of where things are. This was running on Cortex-A57 AArch64 Linux. I saw one assertion failure in GlobalISel, see http://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32471. This is in a program compiled at -O2 (my out-dated test-suite still overrides -O0 and instead uses -O for that program). The root cause of the failure seems to be due to LowLevelType not supporting vectors of pointers. I think this demonstrates that for correctness, we should be trying to test more than -O0, or even more than just LLVM-IR produced by clang, as other front-ends could run into this even at -O0. Due to this assertion failure and the infrastructure I used, the numbers below do not include test-suite/MultiSource/Benchmarks results. On the non-correctness aspects, LNT tells me that: - The programs that report execution time, on geomean are about 17% slower. - The programs that report scores, on geomean are about 21% slower. - Code size is up on geomean about 11%. I'm afraid I don't have compile time numbers, nor any feel for debug info quality. I'll need quite a bit more time to dig into the details to come up with something actionable, although the fact that LowLevelType doesn't support vectors of pointers is already actionable. Nevertheless, I thought to share what I see as is, to see if others see similar results so far. I thought Diana was going to look into fallback rate on the test-suite on AArch64 linux? Thanks, Kristof On 30 Mar 2017, at 10:54, Renato Golin <renato.golin at linaro.org<mailto:renato.golin at linaro.org>> wrote: On 30 March 2017 at 00:27, Quentin Colombet <qcolombet at apple.com<mailto:qcolombet at apple.com>> wrote: On iOS we are at 100% pass rate in 00 g for the LLVM test suite, standard benchmarks and unit tests. In about 5% of all functions GlobalIsel falls back to SDIsel. (Kristof Beyls would have the linux numbers.) The self host compiler correctly builds and runs the LLVM test suite in O0. Having done no tests at all on my side, I think we need to have similar numbers on Linux to be able to flip across the board. I don't want to flip it only for Darwin and not Linux, as that will fragment the effort too much. I'll check with Diana and Kristof to know what's the best way forward, but it should be reasonably quick. cheers, --renato -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20170403/2d1a644e/attachment.html>
Diana Picus via llvm-dev
2017-Apr-04 13:55 UTC
[llvm-dev] [GlobalISel][AArch64] Toward flipping the switch for O0: Please give it a try!
Hi, Here's my results so far: On the test-suite, we get 2 timeouts during execution (paq8p and scimark2). Other than that, everything seems to run just fine. We have about 7410 unique fallbacks out of 52367 unique functions. Assuming I counted right (please let me know if this looks fishy, I personally find the total number of functions terrifyingly small). On a stage 2 build of clang, we run check-all successfully. We have about 64784 unique fallbacks out of 661461 functions. I'm currently trying to run a stage 3 build to compare binaries (just for kicks) and I'll also try to do some runs without fallbacks and count what problems we run into most often. The way I've been counting the total number of functions was to run objdump -t on all the .o files in the build directory, grab everything with an "F" flag and remove duplicates. If anyone knows a better way to do this I'm all ears. Thanks, Diana On 3 April 2017 at 17:10, Kristof Beyls <Kristof.Beyls at arm.com> wrote:> I've kicked off a run to compare "-O0 -g" versus "-O0 -g -mllvm -global-isel > -mllvm -global-isel-abort=2". > I've selected the test-suite (albeit a version which is a couple of months > old now) and a few short-running proprietary benchmarks to get data back > quickly for an initial feel of where things are. > This was running on Cortex-A57 AArch64 Linux. > > I saw one assertion failure in GlobalISel, see > http://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32471. This is in a program compiled at > -O2 (my out-dated test-suite still overrides -O0 and instead uses -O for > that program). The root cause of the failure seems to be due to LowLevelType > not supporting vectors of pointers. I think this demonstrates that for > correctness, we should be trying to test more than -O0, or even more than > just LLVM-IR produced by clang, as other front-ends could run into this even > at -O0. > > Due to this assertion failure and the infrastructure I used, the numbers > below do not include test-suite/MultiSource/Benchmarks results. > > On the non-correctness aspects, LNT tells me that: > - The programs that report execution time, on geomean are about 17% slower. > - The programs that report scores, on geomean are about 21% slower. > - Code size is up on geomean about 11%. > I'm afraid I don't have compile time numbers, nor any feel for debug info > quality. > > I'll need quite a bit more time to dig into the details to come up with > something actionable, although the fact that LowLevelType doesn't support > vectors of pointers is already actionable. > Nevertheless, I thought to share what I see as is, to see if others see > similar results so far. > > I thought Diana was going to look into fallback rate on the test-suite on > AArch64 linux? > > Thanks, > > Kristof > > On 30 Mar 2017, at 10:54, Renato Golin <renato.golin at linaro.org> wrote: > > On 30 March 2017 at 00:27, Quentin Colombet <qcolombet at apple.com> wrote: > > On iOS we are at 100% pass rate in 00 g for the LLVM test suite, standard > benchmarks and unit tests. In about 5% of all functions GlobalIsel falls > back to SDIsel. > (Kristof Beyls would have the linux numbers.) > The self host compiler correctly builds and runs the LLVM test suite in O0. > > > Having done no tests at all on my side, I think we need to have > similar numbers on Linux to be able to flip across the board. > > I don't want to flip it only for Darwin and not Linux, as that will > fragment the effort too much. > > I'll check with Diana and Kristof to know what's the best way forward, > but it should be reasonably quick. > > cheers, > --renato > >
Tim Northover via llvm-dev
2017-Apr-04 16:55 UTC
[llvm-dev] [GlobalISel][AArch64] Toward flipping the switch for O0: Please give it a try!
On 4 April 2017 at 06:55, Diana Picus via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> On the test-suite, we get 2 timeouts during execution (paq8p and > scimark2).Interesting. I'd not seen those failures in the configurations I'd run. I'll look into them (other than that my best bet for debugging is a kernel panic, this has to be easier!).> On the test-suite, we get 2 timeouts during execution (paq8p and > scimark2). Other than that, everything seems to run just fine. We have > about 7410 unique fallbacks out of 52367 unique functions. Assuming I > counted right (please let me know if this looks fishy, I personally > find the total number of functions terrifyingly small).It's about 275000 before uniqueing (which roughly matches an earlier measurement I did). The duplication seems to be dominated by the halide tests, though you have to be a little careful with "main" (which occurs about 500 times). At a glance I'd put the total closer to 53000 (52420 + 492 extra copies of main), but that's a small difference to your figure. Tim.
Kristof Beyls via llvm-dev
2017-Apr-06 13:53 UTC
[llvm-dev] [GlobalISel][AArch64] Toward flipping the switch for O0: Please give it a try!
I've been digging a little bit deeper into the biggest performance regressions I've observed. What I've observed so far is: * A lot of the biggest regressions are caused by unnecessarily moving floating point values through general purpose registers. I've raised http://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32550 for this. I think this one definitely needs fixing before enabling GlobalISel by default at -O0. * FastISel seems to transform division-by-constant-power-of-2 into right shift (see https://github.com/llvm-mirror/llvm/blob/master/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/FastISel.cpp#L456-L468). GlobalISel does not. It seems to me that at -O0 there may be reasons not perform this transformation, but maybe there is a good reason why FastISel does this? * FastISel doesn't seem to handle functions with switch statements, so it falls back to DAGISel. DAGISel produces code that's a lot better than GlobalISel for switch statement at -O0. I'm not sure if we need to do something here before enabling GlobalISel by default. I'm thinking we may need to add a smarter way to lower switch statements rather than just a cascaded sequence of conditional branches. I'll try to add the above content to the document Diana created at https://goo.gl/IS2Bdw too. Thanks, Kristof On 3 Apr 2017, at 17:10, Kristof Beyls <Kristof.Beyls at arm.com<mailto:Kristof.Beyls at arm.com>> wrote: I've kicked off a run to compare "-O0 -g" versus "-O0 -g -mllvm -global-isel -mllvm -global-isel-abort=2". I've selected the test-suite (albeit a version which is a couple of months old now) and a few short-running proprietary benchmarks to get data back quickly for an initial feel of where things are. This was running on Cortex-A57 AArch64 Linux. I saw one assertion failure in GlobalISel, see http://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32471. This is in a program compiled at -O2 (my out-dated test-suite still overrides -O0 and instead uses -O for that program). The root cause of the failure seems to be due to LowLevelType not supporting vectors of pointers. I think this demonstrates that for correctness, we should be trying to test more than -O0, or even more than just LLVM-IR produced by clang, as other front-ends could run into this even at -O0. Due to this assertion failure and the infrastructure I used, the numbers below do not include test-suite/MultiSource/Benchmarks results. On the non-correctness aspects, LNT tells me that: - The programs that report execution time, on geomean are about 17% slower. - The programs that report scores, on geomean are about 21% slower. - Code size is up on geomean about 11%. I'm afraid I don't have compile time numbers, nor any feel for debug info quality. I'll need quite a bit more time to dig into the details to come up with something actionable, although the fact that LowLevelType doesn't support vectors of pointers is already actionable. Nevertheless, I thought to share what I see as is, to see if others see similar results so far. I thought Diana was going to look into fallback rate on the test-suite on AArch64 linux? Thanks, Kristof On 30 Mar 2017, at 10:54, Renato Golin <renato.golin at linaro.org<mailto:renato.golin at linaro.org>> wrote: On 30 March 2017 at 00:27, Quentin Colombet <qcolombet at apple.com<mailto:qcolombet at apple.com>> wrote: On iOS we are at 100% pass rate in 00 g for the LLVM test suite, standard benchmarks and unit tests. In about 5% of all functions GlobalIsel falls back to SDIsel. (Kristof Beyls would have the linux numbers.) The self host compiler correctly builds and runs the LLVM test suite in O0. Having done no tests at all on my side, I think we need to have similar numbers on Linux to be able to flip across the board. I don't want to flip it only for Darwin and not Linux, as that will fragment the effort too much. I'll check with Diana and Kristof to know what's the best way forward, but it should be reasonably quick. cheers, --renato -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20170406/46396c89/attachment.html>
Ahmed Bougacha via llvm-dev
2017-Apr-06 19:06 UTC
[llvm-dev] [GlobalISel][AArch64] Toward flipping the switch for O0: Please give it a try!
On Thu, Apr 6, 2017 at 6:53 AM, Kristof Beyls via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> I've been digging a little bit deeper into the biggest performance > regressions I've observed. > > What I've observed so far is: > * A lot of the biggest regressions are caused by unnecessarily moving > floating point values through general purpose registers. I've raised > http://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32550 for this. I think this one > definitely needs fixing before enabling GlobalISel by default at -O0. > * FastISel seems to transform division-by-constant-power-of-2 into right > shift (see > https://github.com/llvm-mirror/llvm/blob/master/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/FastISel.cpp#L456-L468). > GlobalISel does not. It seems to me that at -O0 there may be reasons not > perform this transformation, but maybe there is a good reason why FastISel > does this?So, FastISel on AArch64 isn't really an "O0" selector: it has a lot of smarts and peepholes, because some JIT users had it as the main optimizing selector for a while. In that sense, it's a pretty aggressive target that IMO we don't have to match.> * FastISel doesn't seem to handle functions with switch statements, so it > falls back to DAGISel. DAGISel produces code that's a lot better than > GlobalISel for switch statement at -O0. I'm not sure if we need to do > something here before enabling GlobalISel by default. I'm thinking we may > need to add a smarter way to lower switch statements rather than just a > cascaded sequence of conditional branches.D31080 seems promising, I've been wanting to take a look, hoping we can use that to emit an optimized lowering. I'm not sure we want that at O0 though (even if only for FastISel+DAGISel parity).> I'll try to add the above content to the document Diana created at > https://goo.gl/IS2Bdw too.Thanks for the investigation! These are also some of the biggest problems I've seen (in particular the FP regbanks). I'll make sure I find the time to file bugs for all the other issues I'm aware of. (sorry I haven't done that earlier!) -Ahmed> Thanks, > > Kristof > > > > On 3 Apr 2017, at 17:10, Kristof Beyls <Kristof.Beyls at arm.com> wrote: > > I've kicked off a run to compare "-O0 -g" versus "-O0 -g -mllvm -global-isel > -mllvm -global-isel-abort=2". > I've selected the test-suite (albeit a version which is a couple of months > old now) and a few short-running proprietary benchmarks to get data back > quickly for an initial feel of where things are. > This was running on Cortex-A57 AArch64 Linux. > > I saw one assertion failure in GlobalISel, see > http://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32471. This is in a program compiled at > -O2 (my out-dated test-suite still overrides -O0 and instead uses -O for > that program). The root cause of the failure seems to be due to LowLevelType > not supporting vectors of pointers. I think this demonstrates that for > correctness, we should be trying to test more than -O0, or even more than > just LLVM-IR produced by clang, as other front-ends could run into this even > at -O0. > > Due to this assertion failure and the infrastructure I used, the numbers > below do not include test-suite/MultiSource/Benchmarks results. > > On the non-correctness aspects, LNT tells me that: > - The programs that report execution time, on geomean are about 17% slower. > - The programs that report scores, on geomean are about 21% slower. > - Code size is up on geomean about 11%. > I'm afraid I don't have compile time numbers, nor any feel for debug info > quality. > > I'll need quite a bit more time to dig into the details to come up with > something actionable, although the fact that LowLevelType doesn't support > vectors of pointers is already actionable. > Nevertheless, I thought to share what I see as is, to see if others see > similar results so far. > > I thought Diana was going to look into fallback rate on the test-suite on > AArch64 linux? > > Thanks, > > Kristof > > On 30 Mar 2017, at 10:54, Renato Golin <renato.golin at linaro.org> wrote: > > On 30 March 2017 at 00:27, Quentin Colombet <qcolombet at apple.com> wrote: > > On iOS we are at 100% pass rate in 00 g for the LLVM test suite, standard > benchmarks and unit tests. In about 5% of all functions GlobalIsel falls > back to SDIsel. > (Kristof Beyls would have the linux numbers.) > The self host compiler correctly builds and runs the LLVM test suite in O0. > > > Having done no tests at all on my side, I think we need to have > similar numbers on Linux to be able to flip across the board. > > I don't want to flip it only for Darwin and not Linux, as that will > fragment the effort too much. > > I'll check with Diana and Kristof to know what's the best way forward, > but it should be reasonably quick. > > cheers, > --renato > > > > > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >
Quentin Colombet via llvm-dev
2017-Apr-26 23:48 UTC
[llvm-dev] [GlobalISel][AArch64] Toward flipping the switch for O0: Please give it a try!
Hi Kristof,> On Apr 6, 2017, at 6:53 AM, Kristof Beyls <kristof.beyls at arm.com> wrote: > > I've been digging a little bit deeper into the biggest performance regressions I've observed. > > What I've observed so far is: > * A lot of the biggest regressions are caused by unnecessarily moving floating point values through general purpose registers. I've raised http://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32550 <http://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32550> for this. I think this one definitely needs fixing before enabling GlobalISel by default at -O0.I commented in the PR. This is a known problem and we have a solution. Given this is an optimization in the sense that it does not affect the correctness of the program, we didn’t push for fixing it now. For O0 we wanted to focus ourselves on generating correct code. Unless the regressions you are seeing are preventing debugging/running of the program, I wouldn’t block the flip of the switch on that. What do you think?> * FastISel seems to transform division-by-constant-power-of-2 into right shift (see https://github.com/llvm-mirror/llvm/blob/master/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/FastISel.cpp#L456-L468 <https://github.com/llvm-mirror/llvm/blob/master/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/FastISel.cpp#L456-L468>). GlobalISel does not. It seems to me that at -O0 there may be reasons not perform this transformation, but maybe there is a good reason why FastISel does this?I think FastISel tries to generate the best code it can no matter what. For GISel O0 however, not doing this optimization sounds sensible to me. Now, I would say that the same remark as the previous bullet point apply: we shouldn’t do it unless it gets in the way of running/debugging the program.> * FastISel doesn’t\ seem to handle functions with switch statements, so it falls back to DAGISel. DAGISel produces code that's a lot better than GlobalISel for switch statement at -O0. I'm not sure if we need to do something here before enabling GlobalISel by default. I'm thinking we may need to add a smarter way to lower switch statements rather than just a cascaded sequence of conditional branches.Sounds optimization-ish to me. Same remark.> > I'll try to add the above content to the document Diana created at https://goo.gl/IS2Bdw <https://goo.gl/IS2Bdw> too. > > Thanks, > > Kristof > > > >> On 3 Apr 2017, at 17:10, Kristof Beyls <Kristof.Beyls at arm.com <mailto:Kristof.Beyls at arm.com>> wrote: >> >> I've kicked off a run to compare "-O0 -g" versus "-O0 -g -mllvm -global-isel -mllvm -global-isel-abort=2". >> I've selected the test-suite (albeit a version which is a couple of months old now) and a few short-running proprietary benchmarks to get data back quickly for an initial feel of where things are. >> This was running on Cortex-A57 AArch64 Linux. >> >> I saw one assertion failure in GlobalISel, see http://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32471 <http://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32471>. This is in a program compiled at -O2 (my out-dated test-suite still overrides -O0 and instead uses -O for that program). The root cause of the failure seems to be due to LowLevelType not supporting vectors of pointers. I think this demonstrates that for correctness, we should be trying to test more than -O0, or even more than just LLVM-IR produced by clang, as other front-ends could run into this even at -O0. >> >> Due to this assertion failure and the infrastructure I used, the numbers below do not include test-suite/MultiSource/Benchmarks results. >> >> On the non-correctness aspects, LNT tells me that: >> - The programs that report execution time, on geomean are about 17% slower. >> - The programs that report scores, on geomean are about 21% slower. >> - Code size is up on geomean about 11%. >> I'm afraid I don't have compile time numbers, nor any feel for debug info quality. >> >> I'll need quite a bit more time to dig into the details to come up with something actionable, although the fact that LowLevelType doesn't support vectors of pointers is already actionable. >> Nevertheless, I thought to share what I see as is, to see if others see similar results so far. >> >> I thought Diana was going to look into fallback rate on the test-suite on AArch64 linux? >> >> Thanks, >> >> Kristof >> >>> On 30 Mar 2017, at 10:54, Renato Golin <renato.golin at linaro.org <mailto:renato.golin at linaro.org>> wrote: >>> >>> On 30 March 2017 at 00:27, Quentin Colombet <qcolombet at apple.com <mailto:qcolombet at apple.com>> wrote: >>>> On iOS we are at 100% pass rate in 00 g for the LLVM test suite, standard >>>> benchmarks and unit tests. In about 5% of all functions GlobalIsel falls >>>> back to SDIsel. >>>> (Kristof Beyls would have the linux numbers.) >>>> The self host compiler correctly builds and runs the LLVM test suite in O0. >>> >>> Having done no tests at all on my side, I think we need to have >>> similar numbers on Linux to be able to flip across the board. >>> >>> I don't want to flip it only for Darwin and not Linux, as that will >>> fragment the effort too much. >>> >>> I'll check with Diana and Kristof to know what's the best way forward, >>> but it should be reasonably quick. >>> >>> cheers, >>> --renato >> >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20170426/745d5645/attachment.html>
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