Hal Finkel via llvm-dev
2017-Oct-27 18:31 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: We need to explicitly state that some functions are reserved by LLVM
On 10/27/2017 01:10 PM, Xinliang David Li via llvm-dev wrote:> > > On Fri, Oct 27, 2017 at 1:50 AM, David Chisnall via llvm-dev > <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org <mailto:llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org>> wrote: > > This seems slightly inverted. As I understand it, the root of the > problem is that some standards, such as C, C++, and POSIX, define > some functions as special and we rely on their specialness when > optimising. Unfortunately, the specialness is a property of the > source language and, possibly, environment and not necessarily of > the target. The knowledge of which functions are special seems > like it ought to belong in the front end, so a C++ compiler might > tag a function called _Znwm as special, but to a C or Fortran > front end this is just another function and shouldn’t be treated > specially. > > Would it not be cleaner to have the front end (and any > optimisations that are aware of special behaviour of functions) > add metadata indicating that these functions are special? > > > > Ideally many of these functions should be annotated as builtin in the > system headers. An hacky solution is for frontend to check if the > declarations are from system headers to decide if metadata needs to be > applied.I agree. Marking external functions from system headers seems like a reasonable heuristic. We'd need some heuristic because it's not reasonable for the frontend to know about every function the optimizer knows about. Over-marking seems okay, however. -Hal> > David > > If the metadata is lost, then this inhibits later optimisations > but shouldn’t affect the semantics of the code (it’s always valid > to treat the special functions as non-special functions) and > optimisations then don’t need to mark them. This would also give > us a free mechanism of specifying functions that are semantically > equivalent but have different spellings. > > > > David > > > On 27 Oct 2017, at 04:14, Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev > <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org <mailto:llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org>> wrote: > > > > I've gotten a fantastic bug report. Consider the LLVM IR: > > > > target triple = "x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu" > > > > define internal i8* @access({ i8* }* %arg, i64) { > > ret i8* undef > > } > > > > define i8* @g({ i8* }* %arg) { > > bb: > > %tmp = alloca { i8* }*, align 8 > > store { i8* }* %arg, { i8* }** %tmp, align 8 > > br i1 undef, label %bb4, label %bb1 > > > > bb1: > > %tmp2 = load { i8* }*, { i8* }** %tmp, align 8 > > %tmp3 = call i8* @access({ i8* }* %tmp2, i64 undef) > > br label %bb4 > > > > bb4: > > ret i8* undef > > } > > > > This IR, if compiled with `opt > -passes='cgscc(inline,argpromotion)' -disable-output` hits a bunch > of asserts in the LazyCallGraph. > > > > The problem here is that `argpromotion` turns a normal looking > function `i8* @access({ i8* }* %arg, i64)` and turn it into a > magical function `i8* @access(i8* %arg, i64)`. This latter > signature is the POSIX `access` function that LLVM's > `TargetLibraryInfo` knows magical things about. > > > > Because *some* library functions known to `TargetLibraryInfo` > can have *calls* to them introduced at arbitrary points of > optimization (consider vectorized variants of math functions), the > new pass manager and its graph to provide ordering over the module > get Very Unhappy when you *introduce* a definition of a library > function in the middle of the compilation pipeline. > > > > And really, we do *not* want `argpromotion` to do this. We don't > want it to turn some random function by the name of `@free` into > the actual `@free` function and suddenly change how LLVM handles it. > > > > So what do we do? > > > > One option is to make `argpromotion` and every other pass that > mutates a function's signature rename the function (or add a > `nobuiltin` attribute to it). However, this seems brittle and > somewhat complicated. > > > > My proposal is that we admit that certain names of functions are > reserved in LLVM's IR. For these names, in some cases *any* > function with that name will be treated specially by the > optimizer. We can still check the signatures when transforming > code based on LLVM's semantic understanding of that function, but > this avoids any need to check things when mutating the signature > of the function. > > > > This would require frontends to avoid emitting functions by > these names unless they should have these special semantics. > However, even if they do, everything should remain conservatively > correct. But I'll send an email to cfe-dev suggesting that Clang > start "mangling" internal functions that collide with target > names. I think this is important as I've found a quite surprising > number of cases where this happens in real code. > > > > There is no need to auto-upgrade here, because again, LLVM's > handling will remain conservatively correct. > > > > Does this seem reasonable? If so, I'll send patches to update > the LangRef with these restrictions. I'll also take a quick stab > at generating some example tables of such names from the .td files > used by `TargetLibraryInfo` already. These can't be authoritative > because of the platform-specific nature of it, but should help > people understand how this area works. > > > > > > One alternative that seems appealing but doesn't actually help > would be to make `TargetLibraryInfo` ignore internal functions. > That is how the C++ spec seems to handle this for example (C > library function names are reserved only when they have linkage). > But this doesn't work well for LLVM because we want to be able to > LTO an internalized C library. So I think we need the rule for > LLVM function names to not rely on linkage here. > > > > > > Thanks, > > -Chandler > > > > _______________________________________________ > > LLVM Developers mailing list > > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org <mailto:llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> > > http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev > <http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev> > > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org <mailto:llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> > http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev > <http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev> > > > > > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev-- Hal Finkel Lead, Compiler Technology and Programming Languages Leadership Computing Facility Argonne National Laboratory -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... 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Alex Bradbury via llvm-dev
2017-Nov-04 22:12 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: We need to explicitly state that some functions are reserved by LLVM
On 4 November 2017 at 20:58, Alex Bradbury <asb at asbradbury.org> wrote:> On 27 October 2017 at 19:31, Hal Finkel via llvm-dev > <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: >> I agree. Marking external functions from system headers seems like a >> reasonable heuristic. We'd need some heuristic because it's not reasonable >> for the frontend to know about every function the optimizer knows about. >> Over-marking seems okay, however. > > I think this is the pragmatic way forwards. For a concise example of > how broken/surprising the current behaviour is: > <snip> > ffloor is legal for AArch64, meaning frintm is produced rather than a > call to floor. Deleting the 'readnone' attribute from the floor > function will avoid lowering to ffloor. Compile with -mtriple=arm and > the generated assembly has completely different semantics (calling > floor and so aborting). > > I'm not sure if there's a tracking bug for this, but the earliest > mention I could find with a quick search was > <https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2141>.As John Regehr clarified on Twitter - the potential issues when names+arguments clash with C99 standard library functions is documented in the LangRef, though it's (at the time of writing) stuffed awkwardly under the "Example" subheading for the call instruction <http://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#id306>. I suppose the point is: the issue described by Chandler in this RFC is a very strong motivation for changing _something_. The approach suggested by David would solve Chandler's bug, but also allow this function naming restriction to be lifted altogether which seems like an even bigger win. Best, Alex
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