On Tue, Jul 2, 2019 at 9:06 PM Jason Merrill <ja...@redhat.com> wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 1, 2019 at 8:59 PM Paul E. McKenney <paul...@linux.ibm.com> > wrote: > > > > On Tue, Jul 02, 2019 at 05:58:48AM +0530, Akshat Garg wrote: > > > On Tue, Jun 25, 2019 at 9:49 PM Akshat Garg <xks...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > > > On Tue, Jun 25, 2019 at 4:04 PM Ramana Radhakrishnan < > > > > ramana....@googlemail.com> wrote: > > > > > > > >> On Tue, Jun 25, 2019 at 11:03 AM Akshat Garg <xks...@gmail.com> > wrote: > > > >> > > > > >> > As we have some working front-end code for _Dependent_ptr, What > should > > > >> we do next? What I understand, we can start adding the library for > > > >> dependent_ptr and its functions for C corresponding to the ones we > created > > > >> as C++ template library. Then, after that, we can move on to > generating the > > > >> assembly code part. > > > >> > > > > >> > > > >> > > > >> I think the next step is figuring out how to model the Dependent > > > >> pointer information in the IR and figuring out what optimizations to > > > >> allow or not with that information. At this point , I suspect we > need > > > >> a plan on record and have the conversation upstream on the lists. > > > >> > > > >> I think we need to put down a plan on record. > > > >> > > > >> Ramana > > > > > > > > [CCing gcc mailing list] > > > > > > > > So, shall I start looking over the pointer optimizations only and > see what > > > > information we may be needed on the same examples in the IR itself? > > > > > > > > - Akshat > > > > > > > I have coded an example where equality comparison kills dependency > from the > > > document P0190R4 as shown below : > > > > > > 1. struct rcutest rt = {1, 2, 3}; > > > 2. void thread0 () > > > 3. { > > > 4. rt.a = -42; > > > 5. rt.b = -43; > > > 6. rt.c = -44; > > > 7. rcu_assign_pointer(gp, &rt); > > > 8. } > > > 9. > > > 10. void thread1 () > > > 11. { > > > 12. int i = -1; > > > 13. int j = -1; > > > 14. _Dependent_ptr struct rcutest *p; > > > 15. > > > 16. p = rcu_dereference(gp); > > > 17. j = p->a; > > > 18. if (p == &rt) > > > 19. i = p->b; /*Dependency breaking point*/ > > > 20. else if(p) > > > 21. i = p->c; > > > 22. assert(i<0); > > > 23. assert(j<0); > > > 24. } > > > The gimple unoptimized code produced for lines 17-24 is shown below > > > > > > 1. if (p_16 == &rt) > > > 2. goto <bb 3>; [INV] > > > 3. else > > > 4. goto <bb 4>; [INV] > > > 5. > > > 6. <bb 3> : > > > 7. i_19 = p_16->b; > > > 8. goto <bb 6>; [INV] > > > 9. > > > 10. <bb 4> : > > > 11. if (p_16 != 0B) > > > 12. goto <bb 5>; [INV] > > > 13. else > > > 14. goto <bb 6>; [INV] > > > 15. > > > 16. <bb 5> : > > > 17. i_18 = p_16->c; > > > 18. > > > 19. <bb 6> : > > > 20. # i_7 = PHI <i_19(3), i_8(4), i_18(5)> > > > 21. _3 = i_7 < 0; > > > 22. _4 = (int) _3; > > > 23. assert (_4); > > > 24. _5 = j_17 < 0; > > > 25. _6 = (int) _5; > > > 26. assert (_6); > > > 27. return; > > > > > > The optimized code after -O1 is applied for the same lines is hown > below : > > > > > > 1. if (_2 == &rt) > > > 2. goto <bb 3>; [30.00%] > > > 3. else > > > 4. goto <bb 4>; [70.00%] > > > 5. > > > 6. <bb 3> [local count: 322122547]: > > > 7. i_12 = rt.b; > > > 8. goto <bb 6>; [100.00%] > > > 9. > > > 10. <bb 4> [local count: 751619277]: > > > 11. if (_1 != 0) > > > 12. goto <bb 5>; [50.00%] > > > 13. else > > > 14. goto <bb 6>; [50.00%] > > > 15. > > > 16. <bb 5> [local count: 375809638]: > > > 17. i_11 = MEM[(dependent_ptr struct rcutest *)_2].c; > > > 18. > > > 19. <bb 6> [local count: 1073741824]: > > > 20. # i_7 = PHI <i_12(3), i_11(5), -1(4)> > > > 21. _3 = i_7 < 0; > > > 22. _4 = (int) _3; > > > 23. assert (_4); > > > 24. _5 = j_10 < 0; > > > 25. _6 = (int) _5; > > > 26. assert (_6); > > > 27. return; > > > > Good show on tracing this through! > > > > > Statement 19 in the program gets converted from i_19 = p_16->b; in > line 7 > > > in unoptimized code to i_12 = rt.b; in line 7 in optimized code which > > > breaks the dependency chain. We need to figure out the pass that does > that > > > and put some handling code in there for the _dependent_ptr qualified > > > pointers. Passing simply -fipa-pure-const, -fguess-branch-probability > or > > > any other option alone does not produce the optimized code that breaks > the > > > dependency. But applying -O1, i.e., allowing all the optimizations > does so. > > > As passes are applied in a certain order, we need to figure out up to > what > > > passes, the code remains same and after what pass the dependency does > not > > > holds. So, we need to check the translated code after every pass. > > > > > > Does this sounds like a workable plan for ? Let me know your thoughts. > If > > > this sounds good then, we can do this for all the optimizations that > may > > > kill the dependencies at somepoint. > > > > I don't know of a better plan. > > > > My usual question... Is there some way to script the checking of the > > translated code at the end of each pass? > > The usual way to check the output of an optimization pass is by > dumping the intermediate code at that point and matching the dump > against a regexp, as in the tree-ssa directories in the testsuite. > -fdump-tree-all will dump after all the gimple optimization passes, > and you can look through them until you find the breakage. > > Jason > I tried out your method. Up to the temp.c.114t.sra, the line 19 from program is i_12 = MEM[(dependent_ptr struct rcutest *)_2].b; After this in the next file, temp.c.116t.dom2, line 19 becomes i_12 = rt.b; Then, I believe, we need to check the pass doing this, but this will take a lot of effort I think to handle dependent_ptr in a pass and after that passes. Although, the approach of introducing new flag seems an easy workaround to me. Anyway thanks for your time.