[llvm-dev] Design issues in LLVM IR

David Blaikie via llvm-dev llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org
Thu Jun 10 10:18:32 PDT 2021


Re: Opaque pointers - yeah, sorry I've left that lingering for years. +Arthur
Eubanks <aeubanks at google.com> has picked that up recently (& credit to a
few others too - +James Y Knight <jyknight at google.com>, +Tim Northover
<t.p.northover at gmail.com>, +Matt Arsenault <arsenm2 at gmail.com> etc along
the way) & seems to be making good progress.

(& agreed - it's crossed my mind that gep starts to look "strange" once
pointers are typeless - but I wouldn't want to get ahead of ourselves and
start removing gep in favor of more raw pointer arithmetic while we still
haven't fully transitioned to opaque pointers)

On Wed, Jun 9, 2021 at 9:19 AM Chris Lattner via llvm-dev <
llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:

> Nikita Popov wrote a great block post last week: “Design issues in LLVM IR
> <https://www.npopov.com/2021/06/02/Design-issues-in-LLVM-IR.html>” that I
> just found.  It is well framed and nicely written, it seems like a good
> idea to discuss this on llvm-dev.  :-)
>
> Here are my 2c for what it is worth:
>
> a) I completely agree we should continue to invest in fixing the core of
> LLVM.  There are long standing issues that we should fix, and not doing so
> slows things down, leads to worse quality of results, etc.
>
> b) I completely agree with his framing on canonicalization and its value.
> I think that LLVM has historically taken this a bit too far (e.g. loop
> transformations, the old IndVar/LSR dichotomy among others) but many of
> those have already been walked back.
>
> c) I completely agree we need to continue to march towards opaque
> pointers, I’m a fan of this work.
>
> d) I’m less enthused about eliminating type based GEP.  The post is right
> that indexing computations are expensive, but that is largely due to the
> algorithms used, not the IR structure.  If this was the thing to fix, then
> we should fix other aspects of the design.  The thing that I’m particularly
> concerned about is array indexes: I think we need to preserve the ability
> to do simple dependence analysis and other array subscript indexing
> analyses in the middle end.  I think the sweet spot is to drop types from
> pointers, but keep them on GEPs.  Alternatively, finish the typeless
> pointer migration and then evaluate what to do with GEPs only when that
> completes.
>
> e) Constant Expressions are a disaster.  In addition to the problem
> identified, there are also many annoying cases to deal with, eg. When
> constexprs exist in phi nodes, trapping constexprs, etc.  In my opinion,
> the fix is to eliminate them entirely, in a few steps:
>
>     1) Introduce a new “RelocatableConstant” object which is *not* a
> mirror of all the IR operations in LLVM, but is instead designed to be used
> in global variables and allows the standard “globalpointer+offset” pattern
> that object files support, and we should add a new MachoRelocatableConstant
> class to represent the “(gv1-gv2+offset)” relocations macho supports.  The
> presence of this would make codegen and frontends easier to write, and get
> rid of all the fiddly pattern matching stuff.  I think we need to talk
> about whether “offset” is a byte offset, or whether it is a series of
> (constant integer) field indexes in a GEP like operation.  I would argue
> for the later to make inter procedural optimizations easier to write, but
> it is debatable.
>
>     2) Move the general constant folding API off of ConstantExpr to
> somewhere else, it never should have been there for reasons pointed out in
> the blog.
>
>     3) Eliminate ConstExpr: after #1, we don’t need a mirror of the LLVM
> IR in constant nodes.  Constant folding should be a failable operation and
> would return the primitive nodes like ConstantInt.  The asmparser / byte
> code parser could auto upgrade general unfolded constexprs to instructions
> when in a function and to [Macho]RelocatableConstant
>
> In any case, I’d love to see progress on any of these.  I’d personally
> love to see the typeless pointers land because we’re in an unfortunate
> in-between state, and we should close off partial transitions.
>
> -Chris
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