On 08/02/2017 11:53 AM, Jan Hubicka wrote: > Hello, > sorry for not responding for a while. Martin Liska has patch to move switch > expansion to gimple level that will likely simplify the code combinatoin.
Hello. Yep, will land today to gcc-patches mailing list. > >> >> combine_predictions_for_bb calculates final probability for edges of >> if-else or switch statements. >> >> For if-elses this is done by combining values computed by different >> predictors using Dempster-Shafer theory. For switch statement DS is >> not used, mainly because we do not have heuristics for predicting >> which case will be taken (paper by Larus concluded that using if-else >> heuristics does not give good results). >> >> So until this patch we just used set_even_probabilities. The name of >> this function is misleading, in addition to setting even probabilities >> it can also understand that some edges are very unlikely and set >> unlikely probs for those. With patch it now also understands that one >> edge is very likely. > > I am not sure that the conclusion of Ball&Larus paper applies to us here. > In addition to usual if-then-else heuristics we have those based on walk > of CFG (such as ones predicting paths to unlikely calls) and those should > work well on switch statements. > > We discussed adding predictor combining code for BBs with more than 2 > successors. Martin, do you have some code for that? This has been discussed and we decided to reject that as we're unable to apply DS theory as we can't evaluate what probability has a predictor for edges different from the edge which it can evaluate. Note that with 2 edges and probability x, one can calculate probability of the second edge simply by 1 - x. That's not doable if one has > 2 edges. That was reason why I decided to use DF theory for such situations and wrote just simple handling of very {un,}likely probabilities. Maybe I overlooked something in understanding of DF theory? Martin > > I guess teaching even propbabilities about likely edges also works, but > perhaps doing more general prediction combining would be cleaner... > > Honza >