[llvm-dev] Delinearization validity checks in DependenceAnalysis
Bardia Mahjour via llvm-dev
llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org
Thu May 16 12:04:26 PDT 2019
Hi Johannes,
> In the example above, it works statically, doesn't it?
Yes, that example works statically, and the delinearization appears correct
to me. What I'm looking for though, is an example showing that
delinearization produces invalid subscripts that are rightfully caught by
the validity checks.
> if loop bounds and access functions are "in-sync", it should work
statically. It does not if you do use different/multiple unknown values
(parameters) or confuse Scalar Evolution (different types).
In practice, many (if not most) loops will have some sort of
type-conversion on 64-bit targets which prevent SCEV simplifications that
are necessary to prove the validity conditions at compile-time. That's a
big problem for loop optimizations.
Bardia Mahjour
Compiler Optimizations
Hydra Squad Lead
IBM Toronto Software Lab
bmahjour at ca.ibm.com (905) 413-2336
From: "Doerfert, Johannes" <jdoerfert at anl.gov>
To: Bardia Mahjour <bmahjour at ca.ibm.com>
Cc: David Green <David.Green at arm.com>, "llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org"
<llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org>, nd <nd at arm.com>
Date: 2019/05/15 03:21 PM
Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: [llvm-dev] Delinearization validity checks in
DependenceAnalysis
On 05/15, Bardia Mahjour via llvm-dev wrote:
> Regarding your example, I'm not sure I fully understand the concern and I
> would appreciate it if you could clarify that for me. My understanding is
> that if the intended shape of 'a' is in fact 'a[n][m]' then the example,
as
> provided, has an out-of-bound access to start with. To avoid this
out-bound
> access one would need to change the upper bound of the j-loop to be
'm-2'.
> Interestingly, if we do that, the current validity checks start to pass
and
> we get [0 2] as the dependence vector. Here's a slightly modified version
> of your example that I tried:
>
> ```
> typedef unsigned long long TT;
> void foo(TT n, TT m, int *a) {
> for (TT i = 0; i < n; ++i)
> for (TT j = 0; j < m-2; ++j) {
> a[i*m + j] = a[i*m + j+2];
> }
> }
> ```
>
> If the concern is that the actual intended shape of the array may have
been
> something other than a[n][m], and that we are indexing it such that the
> accesses are in-bound with respect to the memory of the whole array but
not
> with respect to individual dimensions, then I'm not sure we can reason
> about *any* delinearization statically (except for the limited cases
where
> the bounds are compile-time known).
In the example above, it works statically, doesn't it? Generally, if
loop bounds and access functions are "in-sync", it should work statically.
It does not if you do use different/multiple unknown values
(parameters) or confuse Scalar Evolution (different types).
> Am I misunderstanding the issue?
>
> Bardia Mahjour
> Compiler Optimizations
> Hydra Squad Lead
> IBM Toronto Software Lab
> bmahjour at ca.ibm.com (905) 413-2336
>
>
>
>
>
> From: David Green <David.Green at arm.com>
> To: "llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org" <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org>, Bardia
> Mahjour <bmahjour at ca.ibm.com>
> Cc: nd <nd at arm.com>
> Date: 2019/05/14 02:50 PM
> Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: [llvm-dev] Delinearization validity
checks in
> DependenceAnalysis
>
>
>
> Hello
>
> Interestingly, the example you provide works for me so long as either
it's
> a 32bit target, or the array bounds (n and m) are changed to unsigned.
>
> For a bit of history, DA used to have a different delinearisation method
> based on geps, but it was known to be invalid in same cases and was
> eventually removed. There was no delinearisation for a while until these
> checks were fixed, enough to be correct, but not as powerful as they
could
> be. I believe Pollys delinearisation is much more powerful, and can
version
> loops with runtime conditions.
>
> IIRC, the checks are there for cases like this:
> void foo(unsigned n, unsigned m, int *a) {
> for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i)
> for (int j = 0; j < m; ++j) {
> a[i*m + j] = a[i*m + j+2];
> }
> }
>
> The "j-2" can underflow into the previous i iterations space. So the
> distance vector isn't [0 2] (and isn't even [= <]). Unfortunately this is
> perfectly valid in C (I think for the int a[][m] case too).
>
> See this comment for why they were needed and perhaps a better way to fix
> it:
>
https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__github.com_llvm_llvm-2Dproject_commit_d143c65de3c884d09197da279d2f04f094efaf15-23diff-2D57473b376037dd3637516348b9b02556L3274&d=DwIFAw&c=jf_iaSHvJObTbx-siA1ZOg&r=aihobyOnVzXW7OPSK1-NiSYQkq7oP3ZSUVc4BemvrVo&m=46eKxI_sFjjeBzn7X-OLXSEUwHN-HVCD16TF9OuyIqc&s=adPvJDhPtFMlaTWihZmvWjXqFUFHDnzcV84oaDGlryM&e=
>
>
> Any improvements to the delinearisation code would be most welcome.
> Dave
>
>
>
>
> From: llvm-dev <llvm-dev-bounces at lists.llvm.org> on behalf of Bardia
> Mahjour via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org>
> Sent: 13 May 2019 14:48
> To: llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org
> Subject: [llvm-dev] Delinearization validity checks in DependenceAnalysis
>
> Hi all,
>
> I have been looking at the `DependenceAnalysis` pass in
> `llvm/include/llvm/Analysis/DependenceAnalysis.h`.
> In order for this analysis to produce accurate dependence vectors for
> multi-dimensional arrays in nested loops, it needs to "delinearize" array
> element accesses to recover the subscripts in each dimension of the
array.
> I believe that the current implementation of delinearization is based on
> this paper:
>
https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__web.cse.ohio-2Dstate.edu_-7Epouchet.2_doc_ics-2Darticle.15a.pdf&d=DwIFAw&c=jf_iaSHvJObTbx-siA1ZOg&r=aihobyOnVzXW7OPSK1-NiSYQkq7oP3ZSUVc4BemvrVo&m=46eKxI_sFjjeBzn7X-OLXSEUwHN-HVCD16TF9OuyIqc&s=nraVp9R56UlYi0We27kmGSjZGnM296r0HFpbRR62Fzs&e=
> .
>
> This paper describes how to delinearize the subscripts, and as a last
step
> it requires certain conditions to be met in order to validate that the
> delinearized indexes are correct. The `tryDelinearize` function in
> `DependenceAnalysis.cpp` appears to be checking for cases where these
> conditions can be validated *at compile time*:
>
> ```
> // Statically check that the array bounds are in-range. The first
subscript
> we
> // don't have a size for and it cannot overflow into another subscript,
so
> is
> // always safe. The others need to be 0 <= subscript[i] < bound, for both
> src
> // and dst.
> // FIXME: It may be better to record these sizes and add them as
> constraints
> // to the dependency checks.
> for (int i = 1; i < size; ++i) {
> if (!isKnownNonNegative(SrcSubscripts[i], SrcPtr))
> return false;
>
> if (!isKnownLessThan(SrcSubscripts[i], Sizes[i - 1]))
> return false;
>
> if (!isKnownNonNegative(DstSubscripts[i], DstPtr))
> return false;
>
> if (!isKnownLessThan(DstSubscripts[i], Sizes[i - 1]))
> return false;
> }
> ```
>
> The problem is that in a lot of cases these conditions cannot be proven
> statically, even though the delinearized indexes are in fact correct. For
> example consider this simple loop:
>
> ```
> void foo(int n, int m, int a[][m]) {
> for (int i = 0; i < n-1; ++i)
> for (int j = 2; j < m; ++j) {
> a[i][j] = a[i+1][j-2];
> }
> }
>
> clang test.c -c -O3 -S -Xclang -disable-llvm-passes -emit-llvm
> opt -mem2reg -instcombine -indvars -loop-simplify -loop-rotate -inline
> -simplifycfg test.ll -S -o test.simp.ll
> opt test.simp.ll -analyze -da
> ```
>
> will produce:
>
> ```
> da analyze - none!
> da analyze - anti [* *|<]!
> da analyze - output [* *]!
> ```
>
> If the validity checks were not present, the result would be much more
> accurate dependence vector with accurate dependence distances:
>
> ```
> da analyze - none!
> da analyze - consistent anti [1 -2]!
> da analyze - none!
> ```
>
> In my experience the static validity checks tend to fail in many common
> cases (involving loops with symbolic bounds). Sometimes this happens
> because SCEV is not able to simplify the expressions due to presence of
> type casts and sign/zero extensions, but other times the conditions are
> just not computable at compile-time.
>
> So far I haven't been able to come up with an example where the validity
> checks in the current implementation legitimately catch a case of invalid
> delinearization. I've also disabled these checks and run some tests
without
> finding any failures (other than improvements in the dependence analysis
> LIT tests).
>
> I also had a quick look at Polly which benefits from delinearization.
From
> what I saw, a much more optimistic approach is taken where the validity
> checks seem to be avoided.
>
> My questions are:
> 1. Does anyone have more information about why these validity checks are
> necessary in the current implementation, perhaps with some examples
showing
> an incorrect delinearization that's possible without those checks?
> 2. Are there any concerns with putting these validity checks under an
> option so that we can more easily disable them and experiment? This could
> also help us improve LIT tests, since some of them have been pessimised
to
> compensate for DA's inability to delinearize, and could fail to catch
> regressions as a result of bad changes to the data dependence analysis.
>
> Looking forward to your help on this.
>
> Thank you,
>
> Bardia Mahjour
> Compiler Optimizations
> Hydra Squad Lead
> IBM Toronto Software Lab
> bmahjour at ca.ibm.com (905) 413-2336
>
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> LLVM Developers mailing list
> llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org
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--
Johannes Doerfert
Researcher
Argonne National Laboratory
Lemont, IL 60439, USA
jdoerfert at anl.gov
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