Displaying 20 results from an estimated 10000 matches similar to: "[SROA][DebugInfo][GSoC] Testing SROA on amalgamated sqlite source"
2018 May 30
0
[SROA][DebugInfo][GSoC] Testing SROA on amalgamated sqlite source
>
>
> `SROA' is an early stage pass running at the very beginning of the
> pipeline in `-O{1,2,3}'. Greg Bedwell's report from his DExTer tool
> shows SROA on function as one of the major culprits of Debug Info
> loss.
>
>
The methodology I used is with the opt-bisect-limit option on clang, so
it's not strictly the case that the results presented
2018 May 30
0
[SROA][DebugInfo][GSoC] Testing SROA on amalgamated sqlite source
> On May 30, 2018, at 8:37 AM, Anast Gramm <anastasis.gramm2 at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Introduction
> ============
>
> `SROA' is an early stage pass running at the very beginning of the
> pipeline in `-O{1,2,3}'. Greg Bedwell's report from his DExTer tool
> shows SROA on function as one of the major culprits of Debug Info
> loss.
>
> With
2018 May 30
2
[SROA][DebugInfo][GSoC] Testing SROA on amalgamated sqlite source
>
> is in the business of deciding, but it does score it as a difference
> because it now, at no point, sees the expression "first" evaluate to a
> value of 5, or "total" to a value of 8 which it did previously. From the
> source-level debugging experience, the variables now just get updated
> between iterations.
>
Obviously should've been 7 for that
2018 May 31
1
[SROA][DebugInfo][GSoC] Testing SROA on amalgamated sqlite source
> That is good to hear / expected, since we went though great lengths to ensure that SROA preserves variable debug info.
>
> Have you looked at the location-less phi instructions?
> Does empty mean line 0 or do you mean they have no debug location whatsoever?
Most of them have line 0, only 12 are locationless.
> Are they empty for good reasons or does it look more like an
2018 Jun 04
2
[SROA][DebugInfo][GSoC] Testing SROA on amalgamated sqlite source
FWIW, I've raised the LICM issue here:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37682
On 31 May 2018 at 13:28, Anast Gramm <anastasis.gramm2 at gmail.com> wrote:
> Thanks,
> These are very helpful.
>
> As I understand it, SROA and LICM render some variables
> "useless" by optimizing the code to not use them. Hence we can't debug
> them.
>
>
2013 Nov 24
1
[LLVMdev] wrong code generation for memcpy function in SROA optimization pass
SROA optimization pass did some optimizations and transforms for memcpy function,such as ld/st operations.When someone has written down code like size>sizeof(dest) in memcpy(*dest,*src,size),
there was much likely a wrong code generation.for example,considered as such testcase:
int main()
{
char ch;
short sh = 0x1234;
memcpy(&ch,&sh,2);
printf("ch=0x%02x\n",ch);
}
At
2015 Nov 10
2
SROA and volatile memcpy/memset
Hi,
I have a customer testcase where SROA splits a volatile memcpy and we
end up generating bad code[1]. While this looks like a bug, simply
preventing SROA from splitting volatile memory intrinsics causes
basictest.ll for SROA to fail. Not only that, but it also seems like
handling of volatile memory transfers was done with some intent.
What are the design decisions in SROA regarding
2012 Nov 14
4
[LLVMdev] About a problem in SROA
Hi,
For the following case,
$ cat bad1.ll
target datalayout =
"e-p:32:32:32-i1:8:8-i8:8:8-i16:16:16-i32:32:32-i64:64:64-f32:32:32-f64:64:64-v64:64:64-v128:64:128-a0:0:64-n32-S64"
define internal void @test(i32 %v) {
entry:
%tmp = alloca i32, align 4
store i32 %v, i32* %tmp, align 4
%0 = bitcast i32* %tmp to <2 x i8>*
%1 = load <2 x i8>* %0, align 4
ret void
}
I
2015 Nov 10
4
SROA and volatile memcpy/memset
On 11/10/2015 1:07 PM, Joerg Sonnenberger via llvm-dev wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 10, 2015 at 10:41:06AM -0600, Krzysztof Parzyszek via llvm-dev wrote:
>> I have a customer testcase where SROA splits a volatile memcpy and we end up
>> generating bad code[1]. While this looks like a bug, simply preventing SROA
>> from splitting volatile memory intrinsics causes basictest.ll for SROA
2015 Nov 11
2
SROA and volatile memcpy/memset
On 11/11/2015 8:53 AM, Hal Finkel wrote:
>
> SROA seems to be doing a number of things here. What about if we prevented SROA from generating multiple slices splitting volatile accesses? There might be a significant difference between that and something like this test (test/Transforms/SROA/basictest.ll):
>
> define i32 @test6() {
> ; CHECK-LABEL: @test6(
> ; CHECK: alloca i32
>
2012 Sep 24
1
[LLVMdev] Heads up! New SROA implementation is going on-by-default today!
On Mon, Sep 24, 2012 at 3:41 AM, David Tweed <david.tweed at arm.com> wrote:
> Just a note that the following new regressions have started to show up on
> ARM/Linux:
>
Thanks for letting me know!
I know that there is one serious bug that would impact in BE system. I
should have that fixed today, along with a crasher. I would appreciate help
tracking down any issues once the one I
2015 Nov 11
2
SROA and volatile memcpy/memset
On 11/11/2015 9:36 AM, Hal Finkel wrote:
> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: "Krzysztof Parzyszek" <kparzysz at codeaurora.org>
>>
>> Yeah, the remark about devices I made in my post was a result of a
>> "last-minute" thought to add some rationale. It doesn't actually
>> apply
>> to SROA, since there are no devices that are
2015 Nov 11
4
SROA and volatile memcpy/memset
On 11/11/2015 9:28 AM, Chandler Carruth wrote:
> So, here is the model that LLVM is using: a volatile memcpy is lowered
> to a loop of loads and stores of indeterminate width. As such, splitting
> a memcpy is always valid.
>
> If we want a very specific load and store width for volatile accesses, I
> think that the frontend should generate concrete loads and stores of a
> type
2012 Sep 22
2
[LLVMdev] Heads up! New SROA implementation is going on-by-default today!
After a lot of testing and help from Duncan, Benjamin, Joerg and others, I
think the new SROA is ready for some broader testing. I've fixed all the
crashers and miscompiles that Duncan and Joerg have been able to find
(although I'm sure there are a few left I'll tackle when there are
reports), and the LNT numbers look *really* good. Here is the latest LNT
run we got by flipping it on
2017 May 09
3
RFC: SROA for method argument
Hi,
I am working to improve SROA to generate better code when a method has a
struct in its arguments. I would appreciate it if I could have any
suggestions or comments on how I can best proceed with this optimization.
* Problem *
I observed that LLVM often generates redundant instructions around glibc’s
istreambuf_iterator. The problem comes from the scalar replacement (SROA)
for methods with an
2012 Aug 20
1
[LLVMdev] PATCH: A new SROA implementation
Adding llvm-dev to this thread as this is probably worth wider discussion.
See the original patch email below.
If you're sending just code-related comments, consider dropping llvm-dev.
On Mon, Aug 20, 2012 at 3:37 AM, Chandler Carruth <chandlerc at gmail.com>wrote:
> Hello all! I've been busy working on a somewhat larger patch than usual,
> and Duncan indicated I should get
2020 Jan 17
3
Help with SROA throwing away no-alias information
I'm having an issue where SROA will throw away no-alias information on some
loads after inlining, because the loads are derived from a store to an
alloca which can be removed after inlining.
The pointers that were originally stored into the alloca do *not *have any
aliasing information - the only context that allowed me to assert aliasing
was that the inlined-function guaranteed it to be so.
2014 May 15
4
[LLVMdev] SROA is slow when compiling a large basic block
I would like to get feedback from the community on how I can speed up the
compilation of a function that has one huge basic block consisting of over
150K instructions. It takes about 10 minutes for clang to produce the
object file and the function that is taking up the majority of the time is
LoadAndStorePromoter::run, which is called when SROA is run:
// Otherwise, we have mixed loads and
2014 May 15
2
[LLVMdev] SROA is slow when compiling a large basic block
On Thu, May 15, 2014 at 9:31 AM, Philip Reames <listmail at philipreames.com>wrote:
> On 05/14/2014 06:02 PM, Akira Hatanaka wrote:
>
> I would like to get feedback from the community on how I can speed up
> the compilation of a function that has one huge basic block consisting of
> over 150K instructions. It takes about 10 minutes for clang to produce the
> object file
2015 Jun 01
2
[LLVMdev] Debug info for lazy variables triggers SROA assertion
Hi!
I created a bug report (https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=23712) for
this failure but then I realized that my approach may be wrong.
The following D source contains a lazy variable:
void bar(lazy bool val)
{
val();
}
The lazy variable val is translated to a delegate. The signature and the
first IR lines are:
define void @_D7opover23barFLbZv({ i8*, i1 (i8*)* } %val_arg) #0 {