On Wed, 9 Jan 2019, Jakub Jelinek wrote:

> On Wed, Jan 09, 2019 at 11:10:25AM -0500, David Malcolm wrote:
> > extern void vf1()
> > {
> >    #pragma vectorize enable
> >    for ( int i = 0 ; i < 32768 ; i++ )
> >      data [ i ] = std::sqrt ( data [ i ] ) ;
> > }
> > 
> > Compiling on this x86_64 box with -fopt-info-vec-missed shows the
> 
> >   _7 = .SQRT (_1);
> >   if (_1 u>= 0.0)
> >     goto <bb 8>; [99.95%]
> >   else
> >     goto <bb 4>; [0.05%]
> > 
> >   <bb 8> [local count: 1062472912]:
> >   goto <bb 5>; [100.00%]
> > 
> >   <bb 4> [local count: 531495]:
> >   __builtin_sqrtf (_1);
> > 
> > I'm not sure where that control flow came from: it isn't in
> >   sqrt-test.cc.104t.stdarg
> > but is in
> >   sqrt-test.cc.105t.cdce
> > so I think it's coming from the argument-range code in cdce.
> > 
> > Arguably the location on the statement is wrong: it's on the loop
> > header, when it presumably should be on the std::sqrt call.
> 
> See my either mail, it is the result of the -fmath-errno default,
> the inline emitted sqrt doesn't handle errno setting and we emit
> essentially x = sqrt (arg); if (__builtin_expect (arg < 0.0, 0)) sqrt (arg); 
> where
> the former sqrt is inline using HW instructions and the latter is the
> library call.
> 
> With some extra work we could vectorize it; e.g. if we make it handle
> OpenMP #pragma omp ordered simd efficiently, it would be the same thing
> - allow non-vectorizable portions of vectorized loops by doing there a
> scalar loop from 0 to vf-1 doing the non-vectorizable stuff + drop the 
> limitation
> that the vectorized loop is a single bb.  Essentially, in this case it would
> be
>   vec1 = vec_load (data + i);
>   vec2 = vec_sqrt (vec1);
>   if (__builtin_expect (any (vec2 < 0.0)))
>     {
>       for (int i = 0; i < vf; i++)
>         sqrt (vec2[i]);
>     }
>   vec_store (data + i, vec2);
> If that would turn to be way too hard, we could for the vectorization
> purposes hide that into the .SQRT internal fn, say add a fndecl argument to
> it if it should treat the exceptional cases some way so that the control
> flow isn't visible in the vectorized loop.

If we decide it's worth the trouble I'd rather do that in the epilogue
and thus make the any (vec2 < 0.0) a reduction.  Like

   smallest = min(smallest, vec1);

and after the loop do the errno thing on the smallest element.

That said, this is a transform that is probably worthwhile even
on scalar code, possibly easiest to code-gen right from the start
in the call-dce pass.

Richard.

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