Displaying 20 results from an estimated 2542 matches for "domination".
2017 Jun 13
2
RFC: Dynamic dominators
Hi Tobias,
1) Daniel and Chandler have for a long time been talking about computing
> dominance and post-dominance in one shot to reduce the cost of
> post-dominance and make it (freely) available everywhere. Is this
> covered by your current (or planned) work?
I'm not sure what you exactly mean by one shot; I'll ask around tomorrow.
I wanted to play a little bit with your
2015 Feb 25
4
[LLVMdev] Jump Theading/GVN bug - moving discussion to llvm-dev
>> all the zero paths from entry to %a pass by %b.
>
>
> That is a graph-wise definition, sure.
> So, this is an interesting definition, and maybe this is part of the source
> of the problem.
>
> For SSA, at least GCC requires that both "definition block dominates use
> block" (which would be true here), *and*
> that "definition appears before use in
2013 Nov 15
2
[LLVMdev] dominator, post-dominator and memory leak
Hi Henrique,
I have tried using -mergereturn and inserting a free into the predecessors
of dominance frontier of malloc block and it caused double free. It is
possible for multiple free's to be inserted on the path from malloc to an
exit. For example, in the following CFG:
BB10 (malloc)
/ \
BB11 BB12
... / \ / \
2013 Nov 15
0
[LLVMdev] dominator, post-dominator and memory leak
Try breaking the critical edges (-break-crit-edges).
This way, a new block will be created between BB13 and BB11 (call this
BB11.break) and BB15 and BB12 (call this BB12.break).
The predecessors of the dominance frontier will, thus, be BB11.break,
BB12.break, and BB14.
When we enter through a block with a call to malloc(), we will end up in
one of the blocks in the dominance frontier (kind of).
2017 Aug 26
2
building release_50 with gcc7.2.0 on MacOS: duplicate symbol llvm::DominatorTreeBase
This is release_50 branch of git,
sha1: f1d5723be3f9456a6b16cdf687847ac2918846de
Using gcc 7.2.0 from homebrew.
$ CC=/usr/local/opt/gcc/bin/x86_64-apple-darwin16.7.0-gcc-7
CXX=/usr/local/opt/gcc/bin/x86_64-apple-darwin16.7.0-g++-7 cmake ..
-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/Users/andy/local/llvm5
-DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=/Users/andy/local/llvm5
$ make VERBOSE=1
[ 92%] Linking CXX
2017 Apr 26
1
Collectively dominance
Like I said, i'm nearly positive there is a much faster way, as the sets
are mostly shared except in the cyclic case, and in all reducible cyclic
cases, removal of back-arcs does not affect dominance
(because in any reducible flowgraph, v dominates u whenever u,v is a
back-arc)
On Tue, Apr 25, 2017 at 7:38 PM, Hongbin Zheng <etherzhhb at gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi Daniel,
>
>
2017 Apr 26
2
Collectively dominance
Hi Daniel,
Thanks a lot for all these explanation, I will try it out.
Hongbin
On Tue, Apr 25, 2017 at 7:04 PM, Daniel Berlin <dberlin at dberlin.org> wrote:
>
>
> On Tue, Apr 25, 2017 at 6:42 PM, Hongbin Zheng <etherzhhb at gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> On Tue, Apr 25, 2017 at 6:32 PM, Daniel Berlin <dberlin at dberlin.org>
>> wrote:
2009 Aug 24
2
[LLVMdev] Post-dominance analysis for multiple-exit functions
Many published analyses which build on post-dominance assume a
canonical single-dominator-tree form induced by unifying all exits
(and often adding a virtual edge from START to END). In contrast, it
seems that the current LLVM post-dominator analysis only operates in a
mode in which it generates a forest of post-dominator trees, with one
rooted at each exit node. The problem this can cause is
2015 Sep 21
4
When can the dominator tree not contain a node for a basic block?
When looking into https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=24866, I
discovered that the root cause of the crash is that I was expecting
every basic block to have a corresponding Node in the dominator tree.
Apparently, the "while.end" basic block in the example does not have a
Node in the Dominator Tree. Can anyone tell me if this is expected?
If so, under what circumstances?
2009 Jun 02
3
[LLVMdev] Is there a control dependence graph builder?
Hi,
In browsing through the LLVM source, I don't currently see an implementation
for a control dependence graph builder. Am I overlooking something?
It doesn't look like LLVM currently provides a way to build the
post-dominance frontier of the reverse CFG, either. Dominators.h mentions
forward dominators, but I believe all this is referring to is dominators as
opposed to post-dominators,
2015 Feb 25
2
[LLVMdev] Jump Theading/GVN bug - moving discussion to llvm-dev
On 25 February 2015 at 10:58, Daniel Berlin <dberlin at dberlin.org> wrote:
>
>
> On Wed, Feb 25, 2015 at 6:26 AM, Rafael EspĂndola
> <rafael.espindola at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> > Maybe.
>> > My view is the ideal is either no-unreachable code, or unreachable
>> > blocks
>> > only contain terminators.
>>
>> I am
2017 Jun 13
2
RFC: Dynamic dominators
Btw, here is another interesting paper about post-dominators and control
dependence:
https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/cbb2/9a0e4895025bd9df24f9263217df12f1ed1e.pdf
I think a great outcome of your internship would be some precise
documentation regarding the guarantees the LLVM dominators give --
possibly also considering classic and weak control dependence and the
difference between
2015 May 14
4
[LLVMdev] getnode(BB) = 0; block already in dominator tree
Hi
I run into an issue as part of splitting a critical edge during LICM.
When a new basic block is created and needs to be added into the dominator
tree, the block is already in the dominator tree. I print the dominator
tree and I see it is added into the tree as child of node it is supposed to
dominate.
How do I debug to find out why/when its getting added into the tree. ?
Tips/suggestions on
2015 Jul 09
5
[LLVMdev] Strong post-dominance in LLVM?
There is PostDominatorTree for determining post-dominance. Even if A
post-dominates B and B is executed, that doesn't guarantee that A will be
executed. For example, there could be an infinite loop in-between. Strong
post-dominance makes the stronger guarantee that there will be no infinite
loop from B to A. Do we have anything in LLVM for determining strong
post-dominance and in general for
2017 Apr 26
2
Collectively dominance
On Tue, Apr 25, 2017 at 6:32 PM, Daniel Berlin <dberlin at dberlin.org> wrote:
>
>
> On Tue, Apr 25, 2017 at 6:17 PM, Hongbin Zheng <etherzhhb at gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> Hi Daniel,
>>
>> I mean "*As a set*, B + C dominate D".
>>
>> On Tue, Apr 25, 2017 at 5:42 PM, Daniel Berlin <dberlin at dberlin.org>
>> wrote:
2013 Nov 13
3
[LLVMdev] dominator, post-dominator and memory leak
Hi Henrique,
Thanks for the quick reply!
On Tue, Nov 12, 2013 at 9:13 PM, Henrique Santos <
henrique.nazare.santos at gmail.com> wrote:
> PRE normally uses a latest placement algorithm to do something of the sort.
> I don't know about GVN/PRE, but older version of PRE might have it.
> Just placing the calls to free at the predecessors (dominated by BB12) of
> the dominance
2013 Nov 13
0
[LLVMdev] dominator, post-dominator and memory leak
>
> It seems that placing the calls to free at the predecessors of dominance
> frontier is inadequate. It is possible that there are exit blocks that are
> dominated by BB12 (calls to malloc). I guess we can also insert calls to
> free at these exit blocks too.
That crossed my mind a few minutes later. : )
If you're interested, PRE.cpp existed last at r25315. It calculates the
2017 Apr 26
2
Collectively dominance
Hi,
Is there any way to quickly test if a set of basic block collectively
dominate another basic block?
Thanks
Hongbin
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2017 Jun 13
9
RFC: Dynamic dominators
Hi folks,
This summer I'm working on improving dominators during my internship at
Google. Below is an RFC on switching to dynamic dominators, which you can
also read as a Google Doc
<https://docs.google.com/document/d/1wPYeWykeO51YDPLYQEg4KNTlDIGIdyF65OTfhSMaNHQ/edit?usp=sharing>
if you prefer so. Please let us know what you think.
~Kuba
2009 Aug 25
0
[LLVMdev] Post-dominance analysis for multiple-exit functions
On Aug 24, 2009, at 4:58 PM, Jonathan Ragan-Kelley wrote:
> Many published analyses which build on post-dominance assume a
> canonical single-dominator-tree form induced by unifying all exits
> (and often adding a virtual edge from START to END). In contrast, it
> seems that the current LLVM post-dominator analysis only operates in a
> mode in which it generates a forest of