1 //! Alias analysis, consisting of a "last store" pass and a "memory
2 //! values" pass. These two passes operate as one fused pass, and so
3 //! are implemented together here.
4 //!
5 //! We partition memory state into several *disjoint pieces* of
6 //! "abstract state". There are a finite number of such pieces:
7 //! currently, we call them "heap", "table", "vmctx", and "other".Any
8 //! given address in memory belongs to exactly one disjoint piece.
9 //!
10 //! One never tracks which piece a concrete address belongs to at
11 //! runtime; this is a purely static concept. Instead, all
12 //! memory-accessing instructions (loads and stores) are labeled with
13 //! one of these four categories in the `MemFlags`. It is forbidden
14 //! for a load or store to access memory under one category and a
15 //! later load or store to access the same memory under a different
16 //! category. This is ensured to be true by construction during
17 //! frontend translation into CLIF and during legalization.
18 //!
19 //! Given that this non-aliasing property is ensured by the producer
20 //! of CLIF, we can compute a *may-alias* property: one load or store
21 //! may-alias another load or store if both access the same category
22 //! of abstract state.
23 //!
24 //! The "last store" pass helps to compute this aliasing: it scans the
25 //! code, finding at each program point the last instruction that
26 //! *might have* written to a given part of abstract state.
27 //!
28 //! We can't say for sure that the "last store" *did* actually write
29 //! that state, but we know for sure that no instruction *later* than
30 //! it (up to the current instruction) did. However, we can get a
31 //! must-alias property from this: if at a given load or store, we
32 //! look backward to the "last store", *AND* we find that it has
33 //! exactly the same address expression and type, then we know that
34 //! the current instruction's access *must* be to the same memory
35 //! location.
36 //!
37 //! To get this must-alias property, we compute a sparse table of
38 //! "memory values": these are known equivalences between SSA `Value`s
39 //! and particular locations in memory. The memory-values table is a
40 //! mapping from (last store, address expression, type) to SSA
41 //! value. At a store, we can insert into this table directly. At a
42 //! load, we can also insert, if we don't already have a value (from
43 //! the store that produced the load's value).
44 //!
45 //! Then we can do two optimizations at once given this table. If a
46 //! load accesses a location identified by a (last store, address,
47 //! type) key already in the table, we replace it with the SSA value
48 //! for that memory location. This is usually known as "redundant load
49 //! elimination" if the value came from an earlier load of the same
50 //! location, or "store-to-load forwarding" if the value came from an
51 //! earlier store to the same location.
52 //!
53 //! In theory we could also do *dead-store elimination*, where if a
54 //! store overwrites a key in the table, *and* if no other load/store
55 //! to the abstract state category occurred, *and* no other trapping
56 //! instruction occurred (at which point we need an up-to-date memory
57 //! state because post-trap-termination memory state can be observed),
58 //! *and* we can prove the original store could not have trapped, then
59 //! we can eliminate the original store. Because this is so complex,
60 //! and the conditions for doing it correctly when post-trap state
61 //! must be correct likely reduce the potential benefit, we don't yet
62 //! do this.
63 
64 use crate::{
65     cursor::{Cursor, FuncCursor},
66     dominator_tree::DominatorTree,
67     fx::{FxHashMap, FxHashSet},
68     inst_predicates::{
69         has_memory_fence_semantics, inst_addr_offset_type, inst_store_data, visit_block_succs,
70     },
71     ir::{immediates::Offset32, Block, Function, Inst, Opcode, Type, Value},
72     trace,
73 };
74 use cranelift_entity::{packed_option::PackedOption, EntityRef};
75 
76 /// For a given program point, the vector of last-store instruction
77 /// indices for each disjoint category of abstract state.
78 #[derive(Clone, Copy, Debug, Default, PartialEq, Eq)]
79 pub struct LastStores {
80     heap: PackedOption<Inst>,
81     table: PackedOption<Inst>,
82     vmctx: PackedOption<Inst>,
83     other: PackedOption<Inst>,
84 }
85 
86 impl LastStores {
87     fn update(&mut self, func: &Function, inst: Inst) {
88         let opcode = func.dfg.insts[inst].opcode();
89         if has_memory_fence_semantics(opcode) {
90             self.heap = inst.into();
91             self.table = inst.into();
92             self.vmctx = inst.into();
93             self.other = inst.into();
94         } else if opcode.can_store() {
95             if let Some(memflags) = func.dfg.insts[inst].memflags() {
96                 if memflags.heap() {
97                     self.heap = inst.into();
98                 } else if memflags.table() {
99                     self.table = inst.into();
100                 } else if memflags.vmctx() {
101                     self.vmctx = inst.into();
102                 } else {
103                     self.other = inst.into();
104                 }
105             } else {
106                 self.heap = inst.into();
107                 self.table = inst.into();
108                 self.vmctx = inst.into();
109                 self.other = inst.into();
110             }
111         }
112     }
113 
114     fn get_last_store(&self, func: &Function, inst: Inst) -> PackedOption<Inst> {
115         if let Some(memflags) = func.dfg.insts[inst].memflags() {
116             if memflags.heap() {
117                 self.heap
118             } else if memflags.table() {
119                 self.table
120             } else if memflags.vmctx() {
121                 self.vmctx
122             } else {
123                 self.other
124             }
125         } else if func.dfg.insts[inst].opcode().can_load()
126             || func.dfg.insts[inst].opcode().can_store()
127         {
128             inst.into()
129         } else {
130             PackedOption::default()
131         }
132     }
133 
134     fn meet_from(&mut self, other: &LastStores, loc: Inst) {
135         let meet = |a: PackedOption<Inst>, b: PackedOption<Inst>| -> PackedOption<Inst> {
136             match (a.into(), b.into()) {
137                 (None, None) => None.into(),
138                 (Some(a), None) => a,
139                 (None, Some(b)) => b,
140                 (Some(a), Some(b)) if a == b => a,
141                 _ => loc.into(),
142             }
143         };
144 
145         self.heap = meet(self.heap, other.heap);
146         self.table = meet(self.table, other.table);
147         self.vmctx = meet(self.vmctx, other.vmctx);
148         self.other = meet(self.other, other.other);
149     }
150 }
151 
152 /// A key identifying a unique memory location.
153 ///
154 /// For the result of a load to be equivalent to the result of another
155 /// load, or the store data from a store, we need for (i) the
156 /// "version" of memory (here ensured by having the same last store
157 /// instruction to touch the disjoint category of abstract state we're
158 /// accessing); (ii) the address must be the same (here ensured by
159 /// having the same SSA value, which doesn't change after computed);
160 /// (iii) the offset must be the same; and (iv) the accessed type and
161 /// extension mode (e.g., 8-to-32, signed) must be the same.
162 #[derive(Clone, Copy, Debug, PartialEq, Eq, Hash)]
163 struct MemoryLoc {
164     last_store: PackedOption<Inst>,
165     address: Value,
166     offset: Offset32,
167     ty: Type,
168     /// We keep the *opcode* of the instruction that produced the
169     /// value we record at this key if the opcode is anything other
170     /// than an ordinary load or store. This is needed when we
171     /// consider loads that extend the value: e.g., an 8-to-32
172     /// sign-extending load will produce a 32-bit value from an 8-bit
173     /// value in memory, so we can only reuse that (as part of RLE)
174     /// for another load with the same extending opcode.
175     ///
176     /// We could improve the transform to insert explicit extend ops
177     /// in place of extending loads when we know the memory value, but
178     /// we haven't yet done this.
179     extending_opcode: Option<Opcode>,
180 }
181 
182 /// An alias-analysis pass.
183 pub struct AliasAnalysis<'a> {
184     /// The domtree for the function.
185     domtree: &'a DominatorTree,
186 
187     /// Input state to a basic block.
188     block_input: FxHashMap<Block, LastStores>,
189 
190     /// Known memory-value equivalences. This is the result of the
191     /// analysis. This is a mapping from (last store, address
192     /// expression, offset, type) to SSA `Value`.
193     ///
194     /// We keep the defining inst around for quick dominance checks.
195     mem_values: FxHashMap<MemoryLoc, (Inst, Value)>,
196 }
197 
198 impl<'a> AliasAnalysis<'a> {
199     /// Perform an alias analysis pass.
200     pub fn new(func: &Function, domtree: &'a DominatorTree) -> AliasAnalysis<'a> {
201         trace!("alias analysis: input is:\n{:?}", func);
202         let mut analysis = AliasAnalysis {
203             domtree,
204             block_input: FxHashMap::default(),
205             mem_values: FxHashMap::default(),
206         };
207 
208         analysis.compute_block_input_states(func);
209         analysis
210     }
211 
212     fn compute_block_input_states(&mut self, func: &Function) {
213         let mut queue = vec![];
214         let mut queue_set = FxHashSet::default();
215         let entry = func.layout.entry_block().unwrap();
216         queue.push(entry);
217         queue_set.insert(entry);
218 
219         while let Some(block) = queue.pop() {
220             queue_set.remove(&block);
221             let mut state = self
222                 .block_input
223                 .entry(block)
224                 .or_insert_with(|| LastStores::default())
225                 .clone();
226 
227             trace!(
228                 "alias analysis: input to block{} is {:?}",
229                 block.index(),
230                 state
231             );
232 
233             for inst in func.layout.block_insts(block) {
234                 state.update(func, inst);
235                 trace!("after inst{}: state is {:?}", inst.index(), state);
236             }
237 
238             visit_block_succs(func, block, |_inst, succ, _from_table| {
239                 let succ_first_inst = func.layout.block_insts(succ).into_iter().next().unwrap();
240                 let updated = match self.block_input.get_mut(&succ) {
241                     Some(succ_state) => {
242                         let old = succ_state.clone();
243                         succ_state.meet_from(&state, succ_first_inst);
244                         *succ_state != old
245                     }
246                     None => {
247                         self.block_input.insert(succ, state.clone());
248                         true
249                     }
250                 };
251 
252                 if updated && queue_set.insert(succ) {
253                     queue.push(succ);
254                 }
255             });
256         }
257     }
258 
259     /// Get the starting state for a block.
260     pub fn block_starting_state(&self, block: Block) -> LastStores {
261         self.block_input
262             .get(&block)
263             .cloned()
264             .unwrap_or_else(|| LastStores::default())
265     }
266 
267     /// Process one instruction. Meant to be invoked in program order
268     /// within a block, and ideally in RPO or at least some domtree
269     /// preorder for maximal reuse.
270     ///
271     /// Returns `true` if instruction was removed.
272     pub fn process_inst(
273         &mut self,
274         func: &mut Function,
275         state: &mut LastStores,
276         inst: Inst,
277     ) -> Option<Value> {
278         trace!(
279             "alias analysis: scanning at inst{} with state {:?} ({:?})",
280             inst.index(),
281             state,
282             func.dfg.insts[inst],
283         );
284 
285         let replacing_value = if let Some((address, offset, ty)) = inst_addr_offset_type(func, inst)
286         {
287             let address = func.dfg.resolve_aliases(address);
288             let opcode = func.dfg.insts[inst].opcode();
289 
290             if opcode.can_store() {
291                 let store_data = inst_store_data(func, inst).unwrap();
292                 let store_data = func.dfg.resolve_aliases(store_data);
293                 let mem_loc = MemoryLoc {
294                     last_store: inst.into(),
295                     address,
296                     offset,
297                     ty,
298                     extending_opcode: get_ext_opcode(opcode),
299                 };
300                 trace!(
301                     "alias analysis: at inst{}: store with data v{} at loc {:?}",
302                     inst.index(),
303                     store_data.index(),
304                     mem_loc
305                 );
306                 self.mem_values.insert(mem_loc, (inst, store_data));
307 
308                 None
309             } else if opcode.can_load() {
310                 let last_store = state.get_last_store(func, inst);
311                 let load_result = func.dfg.inst_results(inst)[0];
312                 let mem_loc = MemoryLoc {
313                     last_store,
314                     address,
315                     offset,
316                     ty,
317                     extending_opcode: get_ext_opcode(opcode),
318                 };
319                 trace!(
320                     "alias analysis: at inst{}: load with last_store inst{} at loc {:?}",
321                     inst.index(),
322                     last_store.map(|inst| inst.index()).unwrap_or(usize::MAX),
323                     mem_loc
324                 );
325 
326                 // Is there a Value already known to be stored
327                 // at this specific memory location?  If so,
328                 // we can alias the load result to this
329                 // already-known Value.
330                 //
331                 // Check if the definition dominates this
332                 // location; it might not, if it comes from a
333                 // load (stores will always dominate though if
334                 // their `last_store` survives through
335                 // meet-points to this use-site).
336                 let aliased =
337                     if let Some((def_inst, value)) = self.mem_values.get(&mem_loc).cloned() {
338                         trace!(
339                             " -> sees known value v{} from inst{}",
340                             value.index(),
341                             def_inst.index()
342                         );
343                         if self.domtree.dominates(def_inst, inst, &func.layout) {
344                             trace!(
345                                 " -> dominates; value equiv from v{} to v{} inserted",
346                                 load_result.index(),
347                                 value.index()
348                             );
349                             Some(value)
350                         } else {
351                             None
352                         }
353                     } else {
354                         None
355                     };
356 
357                 // Otherwise, we can keep *this* load around
358                 // as a new equivalent value.
359                 if aliased.is_none() {
360                     trace!(
361                         " -> inserting load result v{} at loc {:?}",
362                         load_result.index(),
363                         mem_loc
364                     );
365                     self.mem_values.insert(mem_loc, (inst, load_result));
366                 }
367 
368                 aliased
369             } else {
370                 None
371             }
372         } else {
373             None
374         };
375 
376         state.update(func, inst);
377 
378         replacing_value
379     }
380 
381     /// Make a pass and update known-redundant loads to aliased
382     /// values. We interleave the updates with the memory-location
383     /// tracking because resolving some aliases may expose others
384     /// (e.g. in cases of double-indirection with two separate chains
385     /// of loads).
386     pub fn compute_and_update_aliases(&mut self, func: &mut Function) {
387         let mut pos = FuncCursor::new(func);
388 
389         while let Some(block) = pos.next_block() {
390             let mut state = self.block_starting_state(block);
391             while let Some(inst) = pos.next_inst() {
392                 if let Some(replaced_result) = self.process_inst(pos.func, &mut state, inst) {
393                     let result = pos.func.dfg.inst_results(inst)[0];
394                     pos.func.dfg.detach_results(inst);
395                     pos.func.dfg.change_to_alias(result, replaced_result);
396                     pos.remove_inst_and_step_back();
397                 }
398             }
399         }
400     }
401 }
402 
403 fn get_ext_opcode(op: Opcode) -> Option<Opcode> {
404     debug_assert!(op.can_load() || op.can_store());
405     match op {
406         Opcode::Load | Opcode::Store => None,
407         _ => Some(op),
408     }
409 }
410