1 //===- DivergenceAnalysis.cpp --------- Divergence Analysis Implementation -==// 2 // 3 // The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure 4 // 5 // This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source 6 // License. See LICENSE.TXT for details. 7 // 8 //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// 9 // 10 // This file implements divergence analysis which determines whether a branch 11 // in a GPU program is divergent.It can help branch optimizations such as jump 12 // threading and loop unswitching to make better decisions. 13 // 14 // GPU programs typically use the SIMD execution model, where multiple threads 15 // in the same execution group have to execute in lock-step. Therefore, if the 16 // code contains divergent branches (i.e., threads in a group do not agree on 17 // which path of the branch to take), the group of threads has to execute all 18 // the paths from that branch with different subsets of threads enabled until 19 // they converge at the immediately post-dominating BB of the paths. 20 // 21 // Due to this execution model, some optimizations such as jump 22 // threading and loop unswitching can be unfortunately harmful when performed on 23 // divergent branches. Therefore, an analysis that computes which branches in a 24 // GPU program are divergent can help the compiler to selectively run these 25 // optimizations. 26 // 27 // This file defines divergence analysis which computes a conservative but 28 // non-trivial approximation of all divergent branches in a GPU program. It 29 // partially implements the approach described in 30 // 31 // Divergence Analysis 32 // Sampaio, Souza, Collange, Pereira 33 // TOPLAS '13 34 // 35 // The divergence analysis identifies the sources of divergence (e.g., special 36 // variables that hold the thread ID), and recursively marks variables that are 37 // data or sync dependent on a source of divergence as divergent. 38 // 39 // While data dependency is a well-known concept, the notion of sync dependency 40 // is worth more explanation. Sync dependence characterizes the control flow 41 // aspect of the propagation of branch divergence. For example, 42 // 43 // %cond = icmp slt i32 %tid, 10 44 // br i1 %cond, label %then, label %else 45 // then: 46 // br label %merge 47 // else: 48 // br label %merge 49 // merge: 50 // %a = phi i32 [ 0, %then ], [ 1, %else ] 51 // 52 // Suppose %tid holds the thread ID. Although %a is not data dependent on %tid 53 // because %tid is not on its use-def chains, %a is sync dependent on %tid 54 // because the branch "br i1 %cond" depends on %tid and affects which value %a 55 // is assigned to. 56 // 57 // The current implementation has the following limitations: 58 // 1. intra-procedural. It conservatively considers the arguments of a 59 // non-kernel-entry function and the return value of a function call as 60 // divergent. 61 // 2. memory as black box. It conservatively considers values loaded from 62 // generic or local address as divergent. This can be improved by leveraging 63 // pointer analysis. 64 // 65 //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// 66 67 #include "llvm/Analysis/DivergenceAnalysis.h" 68 #include "llvm/Analysis/Passes.h" 69 #include "llvm/Analysis/PostDominators.h" 70 #include "llvm/Analysis/TargetTransformInfo.h" 71 #include "llvm/IR/Dominators.h" 72 #include "llvm/IR/InstIterator.h" 73 #include "llvm/IR/Instructions.h" 74 #include "llvm/IR/IntrinsicInst.h" 75 #include "llvm/IR/Value.h" 76 #include "llvm/Support/CommandLine.h" 77 #include "llvm/Support/Debug.h" 78 #include "llvm/Support/raw_ostream.h" 79 #include <vector> 80 using namespace llvm; 81 82 namespace { 83 84 class DivergencePropagator { 85 public: 86 DivergencePropagator(Function &F, TargetTransformInfo &TTI, DominatorTree &DT, 87 PostDominatorTree &PDT, DenseSet<const Value *> &DV) 88 : F(F), TTI(TTI), DT(DT), PDT(PDT), DV(DV) {} 89 void populateWithSourcesOfDivergence(); 90 void propagate(); 91 92 private: 93 // A helper function that explores data dependents of V. 94 void exploreDataDependency(Value *V); 95 // A helper function that explores sync dependents of TI. 96 void exploreSyncDependency(TerminatorInst *TI); 97 // Computes the influence region from Start to End. This region includes all 98 // basic blocks on any simple path from Start to End. 99 void computeInfluenceRegion(BasicBlock *Start, BasicBlock *End, 100 DenseSet<BasicBlock *> &InfluenceRegion); 101 // Finds all users of I that are outside the influence region, and add these 102 // users to Worklist. 103 void findUsersOutsideInfluenceRegion( 104 Instruction &I, const DenseSet<BasicBlock *> &InfluenceRegion); 105 106 Function &F; 107 TargetTransformInfo &TTI; 108 DominatorTree &DT; 109 PostDominatorTree &PDT; 110 std::vector<Value *> Worklist; // Stack for DFS. 111 DenseSet<const Value *> &DV; // Stores all divergent values. 112 }; 113 114 void DivergencePropagator::populateWithSourcesOfDivergence() { 115 Worklist.clear(); 116 DV.clear(); 117 for (auto &I : instructions(F)) { 118 if (TTI.isSourceOfDivergence(&I)) { 119 Worklist.push_back(&I); 120 DV.insert(&I); 121 } 122 } 123 for (auto &Arg : F.args()) { 124 if (TTI.isSourceOfDivergence(&Arg)) { 125 Worklist.push_back(&Arg); 126 DV.insert(&Arg); 127 } 128 } 129 } 130 131 void DivergencePropagator::exploreSyncDependency(TerminatorInst *TI) { 132 // Propagation rule 1: if branch TI is divergent, all PHINodes in TI's 133 // immediate post dominator are divergent. This rule handles if-then-else 134 // patterns. For example, 135 // 136 // if (tid < 5) 137 // a1 = 1; 138 // else 139 // a2 = 2; 140 // a = phi(a1, a2); // sync dependent on (tid < 5) 141 BasicBlock *ThisBB = TI->getParent(); 142 BasicBlock *IPostDom = PDT.getNode(ThisBB)->getIDom()->getBlock(); 143 if (IPostDom == nullptr) 144 return; 145 146 for (auto I = IPostDom->begin(); isa<PHINode>(I); ++I) { 147 // A PHINode is uniform if it returns the same value no matter which path is 148 // taken. 149 if (!cast<PHINode>(I)->hasConstantOrUndefValue() && DV.insert(&*I).second) 150 Worklist.push_back(&*I); 151 } 152 153 // Propagation rule 2: if a value defined in a loop is used outside, the user 154 // is sync dependent on the condition of the loop exits that dominate the 155 // user. For example, 156 // 157 // int i = 0; 158 // do { 159 // i++; 160 // if (foo(i)) ... // uniform 161 // } while (i < tid); 162 // if (bar(i)) ... // divergent 163 // 164 // A program may contain unstructured loops. Therefore, we cannot leverage 165 // LoopInfo, which only recognizes natural loops. 166 // 167 // The algorithm used here handles both natural and unstructured loops. Given 168 // a branch TI, we first compute its influence region, the union of all simple 169 // paths from TI to its immediate post dominator (IPostDom). Then, we search 170 // for all the values defined in the influence region but used outside. All 171 // these users are sync dependent on TI. 172 DenseSet<BasicBlock *> InfluenceRegion; 173 computeInfluenceRegion(ThisBB, IPostDom, InfluenceRegion); 174 // An insight that can speed up the search process is that all the in-region 175 // values that are used outside must dominate TI. Therefore, instead of 176 // searching every basic blocks in the influence region, we search all the 177 // dominators of TI until it is outside the influence region. 178 BasicBlock *InfluencedBB = ThisBB; 179 while (InfluenceRegion.count(InfluencedBB)) { 180 for (auto &I : *InfluencedBB) 181 findUsersOutsideInfluenceRegion(I, InfluenceRegion); 182 DomTreeNode *IDomNode = DT.getNode(InfluencedBB)->getIDom(); 183 if (IDomNode == nullptr) 184 break; 185 InfluencedBB = IDomNode->getBlock(); 186 } 187 } 188 189 void DivergencePropagator::findUsersOutsideInfluenceRegion( 190 Instruction &I, const DenseSet<BasicBlock *> &InfluenceRegion) { 191 for (User *U : I.users()) { 192 Instruction *UserInst = cast<Instruction>(U); 193 if (!InfluenceRegion.count(UserInst->getParent())) { 194 if (DV.insert(UserInst).second) 195 Worklist.push_back(UserInst); 196 } 197 } 198 } 199 200 // A helper function for computeInfluenceRegion that adds successors of "ThisBB" 201 // to the influence region. 202 static void 203 addSuccessorsToInfluenceRegion(BasicBlock *ThisBB, BasicBlock *End, 204 DenseSet<BasicBlock *> &InfluenceRegion, 205 std::vector<BasicBlock *> &InfluenceStack) { 206 for (BasicBlock *Succ : successors(ThisBB)) { 207 if (Succ != End && InfluenceRegion.insert(Succ).second) 208 InfluenceStack.push_back(Succ); 209 } 210 } 211 212 void DivergencePropagator::computeInfluenceRegion( 213 BasicBlock *Start, BasicBlock *End, 214 DenseSet<BasicBlock *> &InfluenceRegion) { 215 assert(PDT.properlyDominates(End, Start) && 216 "End does not properly dominate Start"); 217 218 // The influence region starts from the end of "Start" to the beginning of 219 // "End". Therefore, "Start" should not be in the region unless "Start" is in 220 // a loop that doesn't contain "End". 221 std::vector<BasicBlock *> InfluenceStack; 222 addSuccessorsToInfluenceRegion(Start, End, InfluenceRegion, InfluenceStack); 223 while (!InfluenceStack.empty()) { 224 BasicBlock *BB = InfluenceStack.back(); 225 InfluenceStack.pop_back(); 226 addSuccessorsToInfluenceRegion(BB, End, InfluenceRegion, InfluenceStack); 227 } 228 } 229 230 void DivergencePropagator::exploreDataDependency(Value *V) { 231 // Follow def-use chains of V. 232 for (User *U : V->users()) { 233 Instruction *UserInst = cast<Instruction>(U); 234 if (DV.insert(UserInst).second) 235 Worklist.push_back(UserInst); 236 } 237 } 238 239 void DivergencePropagator::propagate() { 240 // Traverse the dependency graph using DFS. 241 while (!Worklist.empty()) { 242 Value *V = Worklist.back(); 243 Worklist.pop_back(); 244 if (TerminatorInst *TI = dyn_cast<TerminatorInst>(V)) { 245 // Terminators with less than two successors won't introduce sync 246 // dependency. Ignore them. 247 if (TI->getNumSuccessors() > 1) 248 exploreSyncDependency(TI); 249 } 250 exploreDataDependency(V); 251 } 252 } 253 254 } /// end namespace anonymous 255 256 // Register this pass. 257 char DivergenceAnalysis::ID = 0; 258 INITIALIZE_PASS_BEGIN(DivergenceAnalysis, "divergence", "Divergence Analysis", 259 false, true) 260 INITIALIZE_PASS_DEPENDENCY(DominatorTreeWrapperPass) 261 INITIALIZE_PASS_DEPENDENCY(PostDominatorTreeWrapperPass) 262 INITIALIZE_PASS_END(DivergenceAnalysis, "divergence", "Divergence Analysis", 263 false, true) 264 265 FunctionPass *llvm::createDivergenceAnalysisPass() { 266 return new DivergenceAnalysis(); 267 } 268 269 void DivergenceAnalysis::getAnalysisUsage(AnalysisUsage &AU) const { 270 AU.addRequired<DominatorTreeWrapperPass>(); 271 AU.addRequired<PostDominatorTreeWrapperPass>(); 272 AU.setPreservesAll(); 273 } 274 275 bool DivergenceAnalysis::runOnFunction(Function &F) { 276 auto *TTIWP = getAnalysisIfAvailable<TargetTransformInfoWrapperPass>(); 277 if (TTIWP == nullptr) 278 return false; 279 280 TargetTransformInfo &TTI = TTIWP->getTTI(F); 281 // Fast path: if the target does not have branch divergence, we do not mark 282 // any branch as divergent. 283 if (!TTI.hasBranchDivergence()) 284 return false; 285 286 DivergentValues.clear(); 287 auto &PDT = getAnalysis<PostDominatorTreeWrapperPass>().getPostDomTree(); 288 DivergencePropagator DP(F, TTI, 289 getAnalysis<DominatorTreeWrapperPass>().getDomTree(), 290 PDT, DivergentValues); 291 DP.populateWithSourcesOfDivergence(); 292 DP.propagate(); 293 return false; 294 } 295 296 void DivergenceAnalysis::print(raw_ostream &OS, const Module *) const { 297 if (DivergentValues.empty()) 298 return; 299 const Value *FirstDivergentValue = *DivergentValues.begin(); 300 const Function *F; 301 if (const Argument *Arg = dyn_cast<Argument>(FirstDivergentValue)) { 302 F = Arg->getParent(); 303 } else if (const Instruction *I = 304 dyn_cast<Instruction>(FirstDivergentValue)) { 305 F = I->getParent()->getParent(); 306 } else { 307 llvm_unreachable("Only arguments and instructions can be divergent"); 308 } 309 310 // Dumps all divergent values in F, arguments and then instructions. 311 for (auto &Arg : F->args()) { 312 if (DivergentValues.count(&Arg)) 313 OS << "DIVERGENT: " << Arg << "\n"; 314 } 315 // Iterate instructions using instructions() to ensure a deterministic order. 316 for (auto &I : instructions(F)) { 317 if (DivergentValues.count(&I)) 318 OS << "DIVERGENT:" << I << "\n"; 319 } 320 } 321