similar to: Function attributes for LibFunc and its impact on GlobalsAA

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 900 matches similar to: "Function attributes for LibFunc and its impact on GlobalsAA"

2015 Dec 03
2
Function attributes for LibFunc and its impact on GlobalsAA
Hi James, Thank you for the response. I understand the concern about malloc/free hooks. Could we detect that a program has setup malloc hooks (assuming we're in a whole program compilation) and make assumptions (such as onlyAccessesArgMem()) when the program hasn't setup malloc hooks? Using a command line flag could be one option too. I'm currently working on a program where having
2015 Dec 03
3
Function attributes for LibFunc and its impact on GlobalsAA
----- Original Message ----- > From: "James Molloy via llvm-dev" <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> > To: "Vaivaswatha Nagaraj" <vn at compilertree.com> > Cc: "LLVM Dev" <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> > Sent: Thursday, December 3, 2015 4:41:46 AM > Subject: Re: [llvm-dev] Function attributes for LibFunc and its impact on GlobalsAA > >
2015 Dec 04
4
RFC: New function attribute HasInaccessibleState
>is this "internal state” supposed to be private to the function? It could be private or not. Hence the name "inaccessible", to mean that the program under compilation has no access to the state. So while printf and malloc (for example) could share state in libc, the program under compilation cannot access this state. >how this flag would prevent the last “optimization”
2015 Dec 04
2
RFC: New function attribute HasInaccessibleState
Hi, This email is in continuation to the mail thread http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2015-December/092996.html, to propose a new function attribute that can convey that a function maintains state, but this state is inaccessible to the rest of the program under compilation. Such a flag could be added to most libc/system calls such as printf/malloc/free. (libc and system calls do
2015 Dec 04
2
RFC: New function attribute HasInaccessibleState
>but is there or is there not accessible, visible state, Wouldn't ReadNone and/or ReadOnly cover that? If ReadNone is set, it means it doesn't access any of the visible (accessible) states. - Vaivaswatha On Fri, Dec 4, 2015 at 3:17 PM, James Molloy <james at jamesmolloy.co.uk> wrote: > Hi, > > I don't think the attribute as is is strong enough to do what you
2015 Dec 14
3
RFC: New function attribute HasInaccessibleState
----- Original Message ----- > From: "Vaivaswatha Nagaraj" <vn at compilertree.com> > To: "Hal Finkel" <hfinkel at anl.gov> > Cc: "Joseph Tremoulet" <jotrem at microsoft.com>, "llvm-dev" > <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> > Sent: Sunday, December 13, 2015 9:50:25 PM > Subject: Re: [llvm-dev] RFC: New function attribute
2015 Dec 04
2
RFC: New function attribute HasInaccessibleState
>what is a non-public state that no-one but you can access? (I’d call that private). malloc and free could both use global variables that are defined in libc, but are inaccessible to the program under compilation. >if you’re attribute is saying they have some internal state, then malloc() cannot access the state of free() and vice versa. Which is why it would be preferable to call it
2015 Dec 11
3
RFC: New function attribute HasInaccessibleState
----- Original Message ----- > From: "Joseph Tremoulet" <jotrem at microsoft.com> > To: "Hal Finkel" <hfinkel at anl.gov>, "Mehdi Amini" <mehdi.amini at apple.com> > Cc: "llvm-dev" <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> > Sent: Friday, December 11, 2015 3:35:38 PM > Subject: RE: [llvm-dev] RFC: New function attribute
2015 Dec 14
2
RFC: New function attribute HasInaccessibleState
Hi, If these are the options, I'm also in favour of approach B. Approach A redefines ReadNone, which I don't think is acceptable. James On Mon, 14 Dec 2015 at 08:15 Vaivaswatha Nagaraj via llvm-dev < llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > >I am in favor of approach B (although perhaps with different names). > Just to clarify, this does not requires any propagation of
2015 Dec 04
2
RFC: New function attribute HasInaccessibleState
>there would be two disjoint global states In some sense yes, but technically not disjoint. Functions marked with this attribute should still be able to access the globals within the program under compilation, if its not marked with ReadNone. >If malloc and free can both use global variables (there is no notion of library in the compiler) Inaccessible state here refers to any global that is
2015 Dec 11
2
RFC: New function attribute HasInaccessibleState
<<< I may misunderstand, but it seems to me that this solves only query for aliasing with a pointer known to be pointing only to globals defined in the current compilation unit. For any pointer which "may point somewhere else”, you won’t be able to resolve the non-aliasing with the “internal state” for malloc/free, right? To take the original example in this thread: int *x =
2015 Dec 14
2
RFC: New function attribute HasInaccessibleState
Vaivaswatha Nagaraj via llvm-dev wrote: > >I'm against adding this as a "subtractive" attribute. We need to add these as new attributes, not as an attribute that > makes readonly a little less read only. I believe we're in agreement on this point. > Just to make sure I understood right, below are the things that need to be done: > (Approach A) > 1. We
2015 Dec 11
2
RFC: New function attribute HasInaccessibleState
----- Original Message ----- > From: "Mehdi Amini" <mehdi.amini at apple.com> > To: "Joseph Tremoulet" <jotrem at microsoft.com> > Cc: "Hal Finkel" <hfinkel at anl.gov>, "llvm-dev" <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> > Sent: Friday, December 11, 2015 1:28:05 PM > Subject: Re: [llvm-dev] RFC: New function attribute
2015 Dec 04
4
RFC: New function attribute HasInaccessibleState
>What if you had bitcode versions of your C library Then the definitions for these functions would be available. Would we still set function attributes to these functions in FunctionAttrs.cpp if their definitions were available? >This also seems a bit tailored to malloc/free, and can't work for user-defined allocation functions I don't think so. For example, printf would have the
2015 Dec 02
2
GlobalsAA from GVN
Hi, I've noticed that alias analysis queries arising from GVN do not use the results from GlobalsAA. The last call to AAResultsWrapperPass::runOnFunction() before GVN does not add GlobalsAAWrapperPass due to unavailability. This leads to the alias queries from GVN not having any globals mod-ref info. Is this a known issue? and is there any way to have globals mod-ref info available for GVN?
2015 Dec 03
3
GlobalsAA from GVN
Hi James, Thanks for the help. From the log, I could infer that SLP vectorizer is not preserving alias analysis, preventing GVN from getting the info. Although the first function to get compiled has GlobalsAA available during GVN, rest of them do not as SLP vectorizer run on that function invalidates GlobalsAA which is a module pass. Is there a way to force re-computation of a particular
2015 Dec 03
2
GlobalsAA from GVN
Thank you both for the inputs. I've created a patch for the same, please review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15185 >You can specifically insert it into the pass pipeline, but in this case, we should just fix SLP to preserve the analysis. @Hal, I tried doing this but it didn't seem to work. I added the GlobalsAA pass right before GVN but it didn't seem to help. In retrospect, looking
2015 Dec 03
2
GlobalsAA from GVN
Hi Mehdi, Thank you for the response. I'm actually on an LTO setup and was referring to PassManagerBuilder::addLTOOptimizationPasses. Here, GlobalsAA is scheduled to run well ahead of SLPVectorizer. However since GlobalsAA is a module pass, it runs once and a bunch of passes, including SLPVectorizer is run for each function. When one of them invalidates the analysis, rest of the functions do
2015 Dec 04
2
GlobalsAA from GVN
>You could, in the LTO pipeline, reinsert GlobalsAA after the SLPVectorizer (not saying you should). I didn't realise that adding GlobalsAA* after* SLPVectorizer could help. Thanks for this tip. >There is something fishy. Do you have a test case that reproduce with llvm-lto? I'm currently looking at a proprietary benchmark. I'll try to extract out a simple test case and send it.
2015 Dec 09
5
RFC: New function attribute HasInaccessibleState
Sigh... let me try that last part again: Maybe GlobalsAA and/or a GlobalsAA-centric attribution pass could partition writes as: 1. Stores to local allocas 2. Stores through pointer parameters 3. Stores to globals defined in this compilation unit 4. Other Attributing functions with attributes: readonly: only writes of type 1 argmemonly: only writes of type 1/2 almost-readonly: only