llvm-project/mlir/lib/IR/OperationSupport.cpp

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Allow creating standalone Regions Currently, regions can only be constructed by passing in a `Function` or an `Instruction` pointer referencing the parent object, unlike `Function`s or `Instruction`s themselves that can be created without a parent. It leads to a rather complex flow in operation construction where one has to create the operation first before being able to work with its regions. It may be necessary to work with the regions before the operation is created. In particular, in `build` and `parse` functions that are executed _before_ the operation is created in cases where boilerplate region manipulation is required (for example, inserting the hypothetical default terminator in affine regions). Allow creating standalone regions. Such regions are meant to own a list of blocks and transfer them to other regions on demand. Each instruction stores a fixed number of regions as trailing objects and has ownership of them. This decreases the size of the Instruction object for the common case of instructions without regions. Keep this behavior intact. To allow some flexibility in construction, make OperationState store an owning vector of regions. When the Builder creates an Instruction from OperationState, the bodies of the regions are transferred into the instruction-owned regions to minimize copying. Thus, it becomes possible to fill standalone regions with blocks and move them to an operation when it is constructed, or move blocks from a region to an operation region, e.g., for inlining. PiperOrigin-RevId: 240368183
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//===- OperationSupport.cpp -----------------------------------------------===//
//
// 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
Allow creating standalone Regions Currently, regions can only be constructed by passing in a `Function` or an `Instruction` pointer referencing the parent object, unlike `Function`s or `Instruction`s themselves that can be created without a parent. It leads to a rather complex flow in operation construction where one has to create the operation first before being able to work with its regions. It may be necessary to work with the regions before the operation is created. In particular, in `build` and `parse` functions that are executed _before_ the operation is created in cases where boilerplate region manipulation is required (for example, inserting the hypothetical default terminator in affine regions). Allow creating standalone regions. Such regions are meant to own a list of blocks and transfer them to other regions on demand. Each instruction stores a fixed number of regions as trailing objects and has ownership of them. This decreases the size of the Instruction object for the common case of instructions without regions. Keep this behavior intact. To allow some flexibility in construction, make OperationState store an owning vector of regions. When the Builder creates an Instruction from OperationState, the bodies of the regions are transferred into the instruction-owned regions to minimize copying. Thus, it becomes possible to fill standalone regions with blocks and move them to an operation when it is constructed, or move blocks from a region to an operation region, e.g., for inlining. PiperOrigin-RevId: 240368183
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//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
Allow creating standalone Regions Currently, regions can only be constructed by passing in a `Function` or an `Instruction` pointer referencing the parent object, unlike `Function`s or `Instruction`s themselves that can be created without a parent. It leads to a rather complex flow in operation construction where one has to create the operation first before being able to work with its regions. It may be necessary to work with the regions before the operation is created. In particular, in `build` and `parse` functions that are executed _before_ the operation is created in cases where boilerplate region manipulation is required (for example, inserting the hypothetical default terminator in affine regions). Allow creating standalone regions. Such regions are meant to own a list of blocks and transfer them to other regions on demand. Each instruction stores a fixed number of regions as trailing objects and has ownership of them. This decreases the size of the Instruction object for the common case of instructions without regions. Keep this behavior intact. To allow some flexibility in construction, make OperationState store an owning vector of regions. When the Builder creates an Instruction from OperationState, the bodies of the regions are transferred into the instruction-owned regions to minimize copying. Thus, it becomes possible to fill standalone regions with blocks and move them to an operation when it is constructed, or move blocks from a region to an operation region, e.g., for inlining. PiperOrigin-RevId: 240368183
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//
// This file contains out-of-line implementations of the support types that
// Operation and related classes build on top of.
Allow creating standalone Regions Currently, regions can only be constructed by passing in a `Function` or an `Instruction` pointer referencing the parent object, unlike `Function`s or `Instruction`s themselves that can be created without a parent. It leads to a rather complex flow in operation construction where one has to create the operation first before being able to work with its regions. It may be necessary to work with the regions before the operation is created. In particular, in `build` and `parse` functions that are executed _before_ the operation is created in cases where boilerplate region manipulation is required (for example, inserting the hypothetical default terminator in affine regions). Allow creating standalone regions. Such regions are meant to own a list of blocks and transfer them to other regions on demand. Each instruction stores a fixed number of regions as trailing objects and has ownership of them. This decreases the size of the Instruction object for the common case of instructions without regions. Keep this behavior intact. To allow some flexibility in construction, make OperationState store an owning vector of regions. When the Builder creates an Instruction from OperationState, the bodies of the regions are transferred into the instruction-owned regions to minimize copying. Thus, it becomes possible to fill standalone regions with blocks and move them to an operation when it is constructed, or move blocks from a region to an operation region, e.g., for inlining. PiperOrigin-RevId: 240368183
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//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
#include "mlir/IR/OperationSupport.h"
#include "mlir/IR/Block.h"
#include "mlir/IR/BuiltinTypes.h"
#include "mlir/IR/OpDefinition.h"
#include "mlir/IR/Operation.h"
using namespace mlir;
Allow creating standalone Regions Currently, regions can only be constructed by passing in a `Function` or an `Instruction` pointer referencing the parent object, unlike `Function`s or `Instruction`s themselves that can be created without a parent. It leads to a rather complex flow in operation construction where one has to create the operation first before being able to work with its regions. It may be necessary to work with the regions before the operation is created. In particular, in `build` and `parse` functions that are executed _before_ the operation is created in cases where boilerplate region manipulation is required (for example, inserting the hypothetical default terminator in affine regions). Allow creating standalone regions. Such regions are meant to own a list of blocks and transfer them to other regions on demand. Each instruction stores a fixed number of regions as trailing objects and has ownership of them. This decreases the size of the Instruction object for the common case of instructions without regions. Keep this behavior intact. To allow some flexibility in construction, make OperationState store an owning vector of regions. When the Builder creates an Instruction from OperationState, the bodies of the regions are transferred into the instruction-owned regions to minimize copying. Thus, it becomes possible to fill standalone regions with blocks and move them to an operation when it is constructed, or move blocks from a region to an operation region, e.g., for inlining. PiperOrigin-RevId: 240368183
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//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// NamedAttrList
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
NamedAttrList::NamedAttrList(ArrayRef<NamedAttribute> attributes) {
assign(attributes.begin(), attributes.end());
}
NamedAttrList::NamedAttrList(DictionaryAttr attributes)
: NamedAttrList(attributes ? attributes.getValue()
: ArrayRef<NamedAttribute>()) {
dictionarySorted.setPointerAndInt(attributes, true);
}
NamedAttrList::NamedAttrList(const_iterator in_start, const_iterator in_end) {
assign(in_start, in_end);
}
ArrayRef<NamedAttribute> NamedAttrList::getAttrs() const { return attrs; }
Optional<NamedAttribute> NamedAttrList::findDuplicate() const {
Optional<NamedAttribute> duplicate =
DictionaryAttr::findDuplicate(attrs, isSorted());
// DictionaryAttr::findDuplicate will sort the list, so reset the sorted
// state.
if (!isSorted())
dictionarySorted.setPointerAndInt(nullptr, true);
return duplicate;
}
DictionaryAttr NamedAttrList::getDictionary(MLIRContext *context) const {
if (!isSorted()) {
DictionaryAttr::sortInPlace(attrs);
dictionarySorted.setPointerAndInt(nullptr, true);
}
if (!dictionarySorted.getPointer())
dictionarySorted.setPointer(DictionaryAttr::getWithSorted(attrs, context));
return dictionarySorted.getPointer().cast<DictionaryAttr>();
}
/// Add an attribute with the specified name.
void NamedAttrList::append(StringRef name, Attribute attr) {
append(Identifier::get(name, attr.getContext()), attr);
}
/// Replaces the attributes with new list of attributes.
void NamedAttrList::assign(const_iterator in_start, const_iterator in_end) {
DictionaryAttr::sort(ArrayRef<NamedAttribute>{in_start, in_end}, attrs);
dictionarySorted.setPointerAndInt(nullptr, true);
}
void NamedAttrList::push_back(NamedAttribute newAttribute) {
if (isSorted())
dictionarySorted.setInt(
attrs.empty() ||
strcmp(attrs.back().first.data(), newAttribute.first.data()) < 0);
dictionarySorted.setPointer(nullptr);
attrs.push_back(newAttribute);
}
/// Helper function to find attribute in possible sorted vector of
/// NamedAttributes.
template <typename T>
static auto *findAttr(SmallVectorImpl<NamedAttribute> &attrs, T name,
bool sorted) {
if (!sorted) {
return llvm::find_if(
attrs, [name](NamedAttribute attr) { return attr.first == name; });
}
auto *it = llvm::lower_bound(attrs, name);
if (it == attrs.end() || it->first != name)
return attrs.end();
return it;
}
/// Return the specified attribute if present, null otherwise.
Attribute NamedAttrList::get(StringRef name) const {
auto *it = findAttr(attrs, name, isSorted());
return it != attrs.end() ? it->second : nullptr;
}
/// Return the specified attribute if present, null otherwise.
Attribute NamedAttrList::get(Identifier name) const {
auto *it = findAttr(attrs, name, isSorted());
return it != attrs.end() ? it->second : nullptr;
}
/// Return the specified named attribute if present, None otherwise.
Optional<NamedAttribute> NamedAttrList::getNamed(StringRef name) const {
auto *it = findAttr(attrs, name, isSorted());
return it != attrs.end() ? *it : Optional<NamedAttribute>();
}
Optional<NamedAttribute> NamedAttrList::getNamed(Identifier name) const {
auto *it = findAttr(attrs, name, isSorted());
return it != attrs.end() ? *it : Optional<NamedAttribute>();
}
/// If the an attribute exists with the specified name, change it to the new
/// value. Otherwise, add a new attribute with the specified name/value.
Attribute NamedAttrList::set(Identifier name, Attribute value) {
assert(value && "attributes may never be null");
// Look for an existing value for the given name, and set it in-place.
auto *it = findAttr(attrs, name, isSorted());
if (it != attrs.end()) {
// Only update if the value is different from the existing.
Attribute oldValue = it->second;
if (oldValue != value) {
dictionarySorted.setPointer(nullptr);
it->second = value;
}
return oldValue;
}
// Otherwise, insert the new attribute into its sorted position.
it = llvm::lower_bound(attrs, name);
dictionarySorted.setPointer(nullptr);
attrs.insert(it, {name, value});
return Attribute();
}
Attribute NamedAttrList::set(StringRef name, Attribute value) {
assert(value && "setting null attribute not supported");
return set(mlir::Identifier::get(name, value.getContext()), value);
}
Attribute
NamedAttrList::eraseImpl(SmallVectorImpl<NamedAttribute>::iterator it) {
if (it == attrs.end())
return nullptr;
// Erasing does not affect the sorted property.
Attribute attr = it->second;
attrs.erase(it);
dictionarySorted.setPointer(nullptr);
return attr;
}
Attribute NamedAttrList::erase(Identifier name) {
return eraseImpl(findAttr(attrs, name, isSorted()));
}
Attribute NamedAttrList::erase(StringRef name) {
return eraseImpl(findAttr(attrs, name, isSorted()));
}
NamedAttrList &
NamedAttrList::operator=(const SmallVectorImpl<NamedAttribute> &rhs) {
assign(rhs.begin(), rhs.end());
return *this;
}
NamedAttrList::operator ArrayRef<NamedAttribute>() const { return attrs; }
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// OperationState
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
Allow creating standalone Regions Currently, regions can only be constructed by passing in a `Function` or an `Instruction` pointer referencing the parent object, unlike `Function`s or `Instruction`s themselves that can be created without a parent. It leads to a rather complex flow in operation construction where one has to create the operation first before being able to work with its regions. It may be necessary to work with the regions before the operation is created. In particular, in `build` and `parse` functions that are executed _before_ the operation is created in cases where boilerplate region manipulation is required (for example, inserting the hypothetical default terminator in affine regions). Allow creating standalone regions. Such regions are meant to own a list of blocks and transfer them to other regions on demand. Each instruction stores a fixed number of regions as trailing objects and has ownership of them. This decreases the size of the Instruction object for the common case of instructions without regions. Keep this behavior intact. To allow some flexibility in construction, make OperationState store an owning vector of regions. When the Builder creates an Instruction from OperationState, the bodies of the regions are transferred into the instruction-owned regions to minimize copying. Thus, it becomes possible to fill standalone regions with blocks and move them to an operation when it is constructed, or move blocks from a region to an operation region, e.g., for inlining. PiperOrigin-RevId: 240368183
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OperationState::OperationState(Location location, StringRef name)
: location(location), name(name, location->getContext()) {}
Allow creating standalone Regions Currently, regions can only be constructed by passing in a `Function` or an `Instruction` pointer referencing the parent object, unlike `Function`s or `Instruction`s themselves that can be created without a parent. It leads to a rather complex flow in operation construction where one has to create the operation first before being able to work with its regions. It may be necessary to work with the regions before the operation is created. In particular, in `build` and `parse` functions that are executed _before_ the operation is created in cases where boilerplate region manipulation is required (for example, inserting the hypothetical default terminator in affine regions). Allow creating standalone regions. Such regions are meant to own a list of blocks and transfer them to other regions on demand. Each instruction stores a fixed number of regions as trailing objects and has ownership of them. This decreases the size of the Instruction object for the common case of instructions without regions. Keep this behavior intact. To allow some flexibility in construction, make OperationState store an owning vector of regions. When the Builder creates an Instruction from OperationState, the bodies of the regions are transferred into the instruction-owned regions to minimize copying. Thus, it becomes possible to fill standalone regions with blocks and move them to an operation when it is constructed, or move blocks from a region to an operation region, e.g., for inlining. PiperOrigin-RevId: 240368183
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OperationState::OperationState(Location location, OperationName name)
: location(location), name(name) {}
Allow creating standalone Regions Currently, regions can only be constructed by passing in a `Function` or an `Instruction` pointer referencing the parent object, unlike `Function`s or `Instruction`s themselves that can be created without a parent. It leads to a rather complex flow in operation construction where one has to create the operation first before being able to work with its regions. It may be necessary to work with the regions before the operation is created. In particular, in `build` and `parse` functions that are executed _before_ the operation is created in cases where boilerplate region manipulation is required (for example, inserting the hypothetical default terminator in affine regions). Allow creating standalone regions. Such regions are meant to own a list of blocks and transfer them to other regions on demand. Each instruction stores a fixed number of regions as trailing objects and has ownership of them. This decreases the size of the Instruction object for the common case of instructions without regions. Keep this behavior intact. To allow some flexibility in construction, make OperationState store an owning vector of regions. When the Builder creates an Instruction from OperationState, the bodies of the regions are transferred into the instruction-owned regions to minimize copying. Thus, it becomes possible to fill standalone regions with blocks and move them to an operation when it is constructed, or move blocks from a region to an operation region, e.g., for inlining. PiperOrigin-RevId: 240368183
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OperationState::OperationState(Location location, StringRef name,
ValueRange operands, TypeRange types,
Allow creating standalone Regions Currently, regions can only be constructed by passing in a `Function` or an `Instruction` pointer referencing the parent object, unlike `Function`s or `Instruction`s themselves that can be created without a parent. It leads to a rather complex flow in operation construction where one has to create the operation first before being able to work with its regions. It may be necessary to work with the regions before the operation is created. In particular, in `build` and `parse` functions that are executed _before_ the operation is created in cases where boilerplate region manipulation is required (for example, inserting the hypothetical default terminator in affine regions). Allow creating standalone regions. Such regions are meant to own a list of blocks and transfer them to other regions on demand. Each instruction stores a fixed number of regions as trailing objects and has ownership of them. This decreases the size of the Instruction object for the common case of instructions without regions. Keep this behavior intact. To allow some flexibility in construction, make OperationState store an owning vector of regions. When the Builder creates an Instruction from OperationState, the bodies of the regions are transferred into the instruction-owned regions to minimize copying. Thus, it becomes possible to fill standalone regions with blocks and move them to an operation when it is constructed, or move blocks from a region to an operation region, e.g., for inlining. PiperOrigin-RevId: 240368183
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ArrayRef<NamedAttribute> attributes,
BlockRange successors,
MutableArrayRef<std::unique_ptr<Region>> regions)
: location(location), name(name, location->getContext()),
Allow creating standalone Regions Currently, regions can only be constructed by passing in a `Function` or an `Instruction` pointer referencing the parent object, unlike `Function`s or `Instruction`s themselves that can be created without a parent. It leads to a rather complex flow in operation construction where one has to create the operation first before being able to work with its regions. It may be necessary to work with the regions before the operation is created. In particular, in `build` and `parse` functions that are executed _before_ the operation is created in cases where boilerplate region manipulation is required (for example, inserting the hypothetical default terminator in affine regions). Allow creating standalone regions. Such regions are meant to own a list of blocks and transfer them to other regions on demand. Each instruction stores a fixed number of regions as trailing objects and has ownership of them. This decreases the size of the Instruction object for the common case of instructions without regions. Keep this behavior intact. To allow some flexibility in construction, make OperationState store an owning vector of regions. When the Builder creates an Instruction from OperationState, the bodies of the regions are transferred into the instruction-owned regions to minimize copying. Thus, it becomes possible to fill standalone regions with blocks and move them to an operation when it is constructed, or move blocks from a region to an operation region, e.g., for inlining. PiperOrigin-RevId: 240368183
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operands(operands.begin(), operands.end()),
types(types.begin(), types.end()),
attributes(attributes.begin(), attributes.end()),
successors(successors.begin(), successors.end()) {
for (std::unique_ptr<Region> &r : regions)
Allow creating standalone Regions Currently, regions can only be constructed by passing in a `Function` or an `Instruction` pointer referencing the parent object, unlike `Function`s or `Instruction`s themselves that can be created without a parent. It leads to a rather complex flow in operation construction where one has to create the operation first before being able to work with its regions. It may be necessary to work with the regions before the operation is created. In particular, in `build` and `parse` functions that are executed _before_ the operation is created in cases where boilerplate region manipulation is required (for example, inserting the hypothetical default terminator in affine regions). Allow creating standalone regions. Such regions are meant to own a list of blocks and transfer them to other regions on demand. Each instruction stores a fixed number of regions as trailing objects and has ownership of them. This decreases the size of the Instruction object for the common case of instructions without regions. Keep this behavior intact. To allow some flexibility in construction, make OperationState store an owning vector of regions. When the Builder creates an Instruction from OperationState, the bodies of the regions are transferred into the instruction-owned regions to minimize copying. Thus, it becomes possible to fill standalone regions with blocks and move them to an operation when it is constructed, or move blocks from a region to an operation region, e.g., for inlining. PiperOrigin-RevId: 240368183
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this->regions.push_back(std::move(r));
}
void OperationState::addOperands(ValueRange newOperands) {
operands.append(newOperands.begin(), newOperands.end());
}
void OperationState::addSuccessors(BlockRange newSuccessors) {
successors.append(newSuccessors.begin(), newSuccessors.end());
}
Allow creating standalone Regions Currently, regions can only be constructed by passing in a `Function` or an `Instruction` pointer referencing the parent object, unlike `Function`s or `Instruction`s themselves that can be created without a parent. It leads to a rather complex flow in operation construction where one has to create the operation first before being able to work with its regions. It may be necessary to work with the regions before the operation is created. In particular, in `build` and `parse` functions that are executed _before_ the operation is created in cases where boilerplate region manipulation is required (for example, inserting the hypothetical default terminator in affine regions). Allow creating standalone regions. Such regions are meant to own a list of blocks and transfer them to other regions on demand. Each instruction stores a fixed number of regions as trailing objects and has ownership of them. This decreases the size of the Instruction object for the common case of instructions without regions. Keep this behavior intact. To allow some flexibility in construction, make OperationState store an owning vector of regions. When the Builder creates an Instruction from OperationState, the bodies of the regions are transferred into the instruction-owned regions to minimize copying. Thus, it becomes possible to fill standalone regions with blocks and move them to an operation when it is constructed, or move blocks from a region to an operation region, e.g., for inlining. PiperOrigin-RevId: 240368183
2019-03-26 09:55:06 -07:00
Region *OperationState::addRegion() {
regions.emplace_back(new Region);
return regions.back().get();
}
void OperationState::addRegion(std::unique_ptr<Region> &&region) {
regions.push_back(std::move(region));
}
void OperationState::addRegions(
MutableArrayRef<std::unique_ptr<Region>> regions) {
for (std::unique_ptr<Region> &region : regions)
addRegion(std::move(region));
}
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// OperandStorage
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
detail::OperandStorage::OperandStorage(Operation *owner, ValueRange values)
: representation(0) {
auto &inlineStorage = getInlineStorage();
inlineStorage.numOperands = inlineStorage.capacity = values.size();
auto *operandPtrBegin = getTrailingObjects<OpOperand>();
for (unsigned i = 0, e = inlineStorage.numOperands; i < e; ++i)
new (&operandPtrBegin[i]) OpOperand(owner, values[i]);
}
detail::OperandStorage::~OperandStorage() {
// Destruct the current storage container.
if (isDynamicStorage()) {
TrailingOperandStorage &storage = getDynamicStorage();
storage.~TrailingOperandStorage();
free(&storage);
} else {
getInlineStorage().~TrailingOperandStorage();
}
}
/// Replace the operands contained in the storage with the ones provided in
/// 'values'.
void detail::OperandStorage::setOperands(Operation *owner, ValueRange values) {
MutableArrayRef<OpOperand> storageOperands = resize(owner, values.size());
for (unsigned i = 0, e = values.size(); i != e; ++i)
storageOperands[i].set(values[i]);
}
/// Replace the operands beginning at 'start' and ending at 'start' + 'length'
/// with the ones provided in 'operands'. 'operands' may be smaller or larger
/// than the range pointed to by 'start'+'length'.
void detail::OperandStorage::setOperands(Operation *owner, unsigned start,
unsigned length, ValueRange operands) {
// If the new size is the same, we can update inplace.
unsigned newSize = operands.size();
if (newSize == length) {
MutableArrayRef<OpOperand> storageOperands = getOperands();
for (unsigned i = 0, e = length; i != e; ++i)
storageOperands[start + i].set(operands[i]);
return;
}
// If the new size is greater, remove the extra operands and set the rest
// inplace.
if (newSize < length) {
eraseOperands(start + operands.size(), length - newSize);
setOperands(owner, start, newSize, operands);
return;
}
// Otherwise, the new size is greater so we need to grow the storage.
auto storageOperands = resize(owner, size() + (newSize - length));
// Shift operands to the right to make space for the new operands.
unsigned rotateSize = storageOperands.size() - (start + length);
auto rbegin = storageOperands.rbegin();
std::rotate(rbegin, std::next(rbegin, newSize - length), rbegin + rotateSize);
// Update the operands inplace.
for (unsigned i = 0, e = operands.size(); i != e; ++i)
storageOperands[start + i].set(operands[i]);
}
/// Erase an operand held by the storage.
void detail::OperandStorage::eraseOperands(unsigned start, unsigned length) {
TrailingOperandStorage &storage = getStorage();
MutableArrayRef<OpOperand> operands = storage.getOperands();
assert((start + length) <= operands.size());
storage.numOperands -= length;
// Shift all operands down if the operand to remove is not at the end.
if (start != storage.numOperands) {
auto *indexIt = std::next(operands.begin(), start);
std::rotate(indexIt, std::next(indexIt, length), operands.end());
}
for (unsigned i = 0; i != length; ++i)
operands[storage.numOperands + i].~OpOperand();
}
/// Resize the storage to the given size. Returns the array containing the new
/// operands.
MutableArrayRef<OpOperand> detail::OperandStorage::resize(Operation *owner,
unsigned newSize) {
TrailingOperandStorage &storage = getStorage();
// If the number of operands is less than or equal to the current amount, we
// can just update in place.
unsigned &numOperands = storage.numOperands;
MutableArrayRef<OpOperand> operands = storage.getOperands();
if (newSize <= numOperands) {
// If the number of new size is less than the current, remove any extra
// operands.
for (unsigned i = newSize; i != numOperands; ++i)
operands[i].~OpOperand();
numOperands = newSize;
return operands.take_front(newSize);
}
// If the new size is within the original inline capacity, grow inplace.
if (newSize <= storage.capacity) {
OpOperand *opBegin = operands.data();
for (unsigned e = newSize; numOperands != e; ++numOperands)
new (&opBegin[numOperands]) OpOperand(owner);
return MutableArrayRef<OpOperand>(opBegin, newSize);
}
// Otherwise, we need to allocate a new storage.
unsigned newCapacity =
std::max(unsigned(llvm::NextPowerOf2(storage.capacity + 2)), newSize);
auto *newStorageMem =
malloc(TrailingOperandStorage::totalSizeToAlloc<OpOperand>(newCapacity));
auto *newStorage = ::new (newStorageMem) TrailingOperandStorage();
newStorage->numOperands = newSize;
newStorage->capacity = newCapacity;
// Move the current operands to the new storage.
MutableArrayRef<OpOperand> newOperands = newStorage->getOperands();
std::uninitialized_copy(std::make_move_iterator(operands.begin()),
std::make_move_iterator(operands.end()),
newOperands.begin());
// Destroy the original operands.
for (auto &operand : operands)
operand.~OpOperand();
// Initialize any new operands.
for (unsigned e = newSize; numOperands != e; ++numOperands)
new (&newOperands[numOperands]) OpOperand(owner);
// If the current storage is also dynamic, free it.
if (isDynamicStorage())
free(&storage);
// Update the storage representation to use the new dynamic storage.
representation = reinterpret_cast<intptr_t>(newStorage);
representation |= DynamicStorageBit;
return newOperands;
}
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// ResultStorage
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
/// Returns the parent operation of this trailing result.
Operation *detail::TrailingOpResult::getOwner() {
// We need to do some arithmetic to get the operation pointer. Trailing
// results are stored in reverse order before the inline results of the
// operation, so move the trailing owner up to the start of the array.
TrailingOpResult *trailingIt = this + (trailingResultNumber + 1);
// Move the owner past the inline op results to get to the operation.
auto *inlineResultIt = reinterpret_cast<InLineOpResult *>(trailingIt) +
OpResult::getMaxInlineResults();
return reinterpret_cast<Operation *>(inlineResultIt);
}
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// Operation Value-Iterators
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// OperandRange
OperandRange::OperandRange(Operation *op)
: OperandRange(op->getOpOperands().data(), op->getNumOperands()) {}
/// Return the operand index of the first element of this range. The range
/// must not be empty.
unsigned OperandRange::getBeginOperandIndex() const {
assert(!empty() && "range must not be empty");
return base->getOperandNumber();
}
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// MutableOperandRange
/// Construct a new mutable range from the given operand, operand start index,
/// and range length.
MutableOperandRange::MutableOperandRange(
Operation *owner, unsigned start, unsigned length,
ArrayRef<OperandSegment> operandSegments)
: owner(owner), start(start), length(length),
operandSegments(operandSegments.begin(), operandSegments.end()) {
assert((start + length) <= owner->getNumOperands() && "invalid range");
}
MutableOperandRange::MutableOperandRange(Operation *owner)
: MutableOperandRange(owner, /*start=*/0, owner->getNumOperands()) {}
/// Slice this range into a sub range, with the additional operand segment.
MutableOperandRange
MutableOperandRange::slice(unsigned subStart, unsigned subLen,
Optional<OperandSegment> segment) {
assert((subStart + subLen) <= length && "invalid sub-range");
MutableOperandRange subSlice(owner, start + subStart, subLen,
operandSegments);
if (segment)
subSlice.operandSegments.push_back(*segment);
return subSlice;
}
/// Append the given values to the range.
void MutableOperandRange::append(ValueRange values) {
if (values.empty())
return;
owner->insertOperands(start + length, values);
updateLength(length + values.size());
}
/// Assign this range to the given values.
void MutableOperandRange::assign(ValueRange values) {
owner->setOperands(start, length, values);
if (length != values.size())
updateLength(/*newLength=*/values.size());
}
/// Assign the range to the given value.
void MutableOperandRange::assign(Value value) {
if (length == 1) {
owner->setOperand(start, value);
} else {
owner->setOperands(start, length, value);
updateLength(/*newLength=*/1);
}
}
/// Erase the operands within the given sub-range.
void MutableOperandRange::erase(unsigned subStart, unsigned subLen) {
assert((subStart + subLen) <= length && "invalid sub-range");
if (length == 0)
return;
owner->eraseOperands(start + subStart, subLen);
updateLength(length - subLen);
}
/// Clear this range and erase all of the operands.
void MutableOperandRange::clear() {
if (length != 0) {
owner->eraseOperands(start, length);
updateLength(/*newLength=*/0);
}
}
/// Allow implicit conversion to an OperandRange.
MutableOperandRange::operator OperandRange() const {
return owner->getOperands().slice(start, length);
}
/// Update the length of this range to the one provided.
void MutableOperandRange::updateLength(unsigned newLength) {
int32_t diff = int32_t(newLength) - int32_t(length);
length = newLength;
// Update any of the provided segment attributes.
for (OperandSegment &segment : operandSegments) {
auto attr = segment.second.second.cast<DenseIntElementsAttr>();
SmallVector<int32_t, 8> segments(attr.getValues<int32_t>());
segments[segment.first] += diff;
segment.second.second = DenseIntElementsAttr::get(attr.getType(), segments);
owner->setAttr(segment.second.first, segment.second.second);
}
}
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// ResultRange
ResultRange::ResultRange(Operation *op)
: ResultRange(op, /*startIndex=*/0, op->getNumResults()) {}
ArrayRef<Type> ResultRange::getTypes() const {
return getBase()->getResultTypes().slice(getStartIndex(), size());
}
/// See `llvm::indexed_accessor_range` for details.
OpResult ResultRange::dereference(Operation *op, ptrdiff_t index) {
return op->getResult(index);
}
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// ValueRange
ValueRange::ValueRange(ArrayRef<Value> values)
: ValueRange(values.data(), values.size()) {}
ValueRange::ValueRange(OperandRange values)
: ValueRange(values.begin().getBase(), values.size()) {}
ValueRange::ValueRange(ResultRange values)
: ValueRange(
{values.getBase(), static_cast<unsigned>(values.getStartIndex())},
values.size()) {}
/// See `llvm::detail::indexed_accessor_range_base` for details.
ValueRange::OwnerT ValueRange::offset_base(const OwnerT &owner,
ptrdiff_t index) {
if (auto *value = owner.ptr.dyn_cast<const Value *>())
return {value + index};
if (auto *operand = owner.ptr.dyn_cast<OpOperand *>())
return {operand + index};
Operation *operation = reinterpret_cast<Operation *>(owner.ptr.get<void *>());
return {operation, owner.startIndex + static_cast<unsigned>(index)};
}
/// See `llvm::detail::indexed_accessor_range_base` for details.
Value ValueRange::dereference_iterator(const OwnerT &owner, ptrdiff_t index) {
if (auto *value = owner.ptr.dyn_cast<const Value *>())
return value[index];
if (auto *operand = owner.ptr.dyn_cast<OpOperand *>())
return operand[index].get();
Operation *operation = reinterpret_cast<Operation *>(owner.ptr.get<void *>());
return operation->getResult(owner.startIndex + index);
}
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// Operation Equivalency
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
llvm::hash_code OperationEquivalence::computeHash(Operation *op, Flags flags) {
// Hash operations based upon their:
// - Operation Name
// - Attributes
llvm::hash_code hash =
llvm::hash_combine(op->getName(), op->getAttrDictionary());
// - Result Types
ArrayRef<Type> resultTypes = op->getResultTypes();
switch (resultTypes.size()) {
case 0:
// We don't need to add anything to the hash.
break;
case 1:
// Add in the result type.
hash = llvm::hash_combine(hash, resultTypes.front());
break;
default:
// Use the type buffer as the hash, as we can guarantee it is the same for
// any given range of result types. This takes advantage of the fact the
// result types >1 are stored in a TupleType and uniqued.
hash = llvm::hash_combine(hash, resultTypes.data());
break;
}
// - Operands
bool ignoreOperands = flags & Flags::IgnoreOperands;
if (!ignoreOperands) {
// TODO: Allow commutative operations to have different ordering.
hash = llvm::hash_combine(
hash, llvm::hash_combine_range(op->operand_begin(), op->operand_end()));
}
return hash;
}
bool OperationEquivalence::isEquivalentTo(Operation *lhs, Operation *rhs,
Flags flags) {
if (lhs == rhs)
return true;
// Compare the operation name.
if (lhs->getName() != rhs->getName())
return false;
// Check operand counts.
if (lhs->getNumOperands() != rhs->getNumOperands())
return false;
// Compare attributes.
if (lhs->getAttrDictionary() != rhs->getAttrDictionary())
return false;
// Compare result types.
ArrayRef<Type> lhsResultTypes = lhs->getResultTypes();
ArrayRef<Type> rhsResultTypes = rhs->getResultTypes();
if (lhsResultTypes.size() != rhsResultTypes.size())
return false;
switch (lhsResultTypes.size()) {
case 0:
break;
case 1:
// Compare the single result type.
if (lhsResultTypes.front() != rhsResultTypes.front())
return false;
break;
default:
// Use the type buffer for the comparison, as we can guarantee it is the
// same for any given range of result types. This takes advantage of the
// fact the result types >1 are stored in a TupleType and uniqued.
if (lhsResultTypes.data() != rhsResultTypes.data())
return false;
break;
}
// Compare operands.
bool ignoreOperands = flags & Flags::IgnoreOperands;
if (ignoreOperands)
return true;
// TODO: Allow commutative operations to have different ordering.
return std::equal(lhs->operand_begin(), lhs->operand_end(),
rhs->operand_begin());
}