[llvm] Introduce paged vector (PR #66430)

Chuanqi Xu via llvm-commits llvm-commits at lists.llvm.org
Fri Sep 15 02:34:53 PDT 2023


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@@ -0,0 +1,126 @@
+//===- llvm/ADT/PagedVector.h - 'Lazyly allocated' vectors --------*- C++
+//-*-===//
+//
+// Part of the LLVM Project, under the Apache License v2.0 with LLVM Exceptions.
+// See https://llvm.org/LICENSE.txt for license information.
+// SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 WITH LLVM-exception
+//
+//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
+//
+// This file defines the PagedVector class.
+//
+//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
+#ifndef LLVM_ADT_PAGEDVECTOR_H
+#define LLVM_ADT_PAGEDVECTOR_H
+
+#include <vector>
+
+namespace llvm {
+// A vector that allocates memory in pages.
+// Order is kept, but memory is allocated only when one element of the page is
+// accessed. This introduces a level of indirection, but it is useful when you
+// have a sparsely initialised vector where the full size is allocated upfront
+// with the default constructor and elements are initialised later, on first
+// access.
+//
+// Notice that this does not have iterators, because if you
+// have iterators it probably means you are going to touch
+// all the memory in any case, so better use a std::vector in
+// the first place.
+template <typename T, int PAGE_SIZE = 1024 / sizeof(T)> class PagedVector {
+  // The actual number of element in the vector which can be accessed.
+  size_t Size = 0;
+  // The position of the initial element of the page in the Data vector.
+  // Pages are allocated contiguously in the Data vector.
+  mutable std::vector<int> Lookup;
+  // Actual page data. All the page elements are added to this vector on the
+  // first access of any of the elements of the page. Elements default
+  // constructed and elements of the page are stored contiguously. The oder of
+  // the elements however depends on the order of access of the pages.
+  mutable std::vector<T> Data;
+
+public:
+  // Lookup an element at position Index.
+  T &operator[](int Index) const { return at(Index); }
+
+  // Lookup an element at position i.
+  // If the associated page is not filled, it will be filled with default
+  // constructed elements. If the associated page is filled, return the element.
+  T &at(int Index) const {
----------------
ChuanqiXu9 wrote:

Should we add an `assert` here?

https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/66430


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