1.. _loop-terminology: 2 3=========================================== 4LLVM Loop Terminology (and Canonical Forms) 5=========================================== 6 7.. contents:: 8 :local: 9 10Loop Definition 11=============== 12 13Loops are an important concept for a code optimizer. In LLVM, detection 14of loops in a control-flow graph is done by :ref:`loopinfo`. It is based 15on the following definition. 16 17A loop is a subset of nodes from the control-flow graph (CFG; where 18nodes represent basic blocks) with the following properties: 19 201. The induced subgraph (which is the subgraph that contains all the 21 edges from the CFG within the loop) is strongly connected 22 (every node is reachable from all others). 23 242. All edges from outside the subset into the subset point to the same 25 node, called the **header**. As a consequence, the header dominates 26 all nodes in the loop (i.e. every execution path to any of the loop's 27 node will have to pass through the header). 28 293. The loop is the maximum subset with these properties. That is, no 30 additional nodes from the CFG can be added such that the induced 31 subgraph would still be strongly connected and the header would 32 remain the same. 33 34In computer science literature, this is often called a *natural loop*. 35In LLVM, this is the only definition of a loop. 36 37 38Terminology 39----------- 40 41The definition of a loop comes with some additional terminology: 42 43* An **entering block** (or **loop predecessor**) is a non-loop node 44 that has an edge into the loop (necessarily the header). If there is 45 only one entering block entering block, and its only edge is to the 46 header, it is also called the loop's **preheader**. The preheader 47 dominates the loop without itself being part of the loop. 48 49* A **latch** is a loop node that has an edge to the header. 50 51* A **backedge** is an edge from a latch to the header. 52 53* An **exiting edge** is an edge from inside the loop to a node outside 54 of the loop. The source of such an edge is called an **exiting block**, its 55 target is an **exit block**. 56 57.. image:: ./loop-terminology.svg 58 :width: 400 px 59 60 61Important Notes 62--------------- 63 64This loop definition has some noteworthy consequences: 65 66* A node can be the header of at most one loop. As such, a loop can be 67 identified by its header. Due to the header being the only entry into 68 a loop, it can be called a Single-Entry-Multiple-Exits (SEME) region. 69 70 71* For basic blocks that are not reachable from the function's entry, the 72 concept of loops is undefined. This follows from the concept of 73 dominance being undefined as well. 74 75 76* The smallest loop consists of a single basic block that branches to 77 itself. In this case that block is the header, latch (and exiting 78 block if it has another edge to a different block) at the same time. 79 A single block that has no branch to itself is not considered a loop, 80 even though it is trivially strongly connected. 81 82.. image:: ./loop-single.svg 83 :width: 300 px 84 85In this case, the role of header, exiting block and latch fall to the 86same node. :ref:`loopinfo` reports this as: 87 88.. code-block:: console 89 90 $ opt input.ll -loops -analyze 91 Loop at depth 1 containing: %for.body<header><latch><exiting> 92 93 94* Loops can be nested inside each other. That is, a loop's node set can 95 be a subset of another loop with a different loop header. The loop 96 hierarchy in a function forms a forest: Each top-level loop is the 97 root of the tree of the loops nested inside it. 98 99.. image:: ./loop-nested.svg 100 :width: 350 px 101 102 103* It is not possible that two loops share only a few of their nodes. 104 Two loops are either disjoint or one is nested inside the other. In 105 the example below the left and right subsets both violate the 106 maximality condition. Only the merge of both sets is considered a loop. 107 108.. image:: ./loop-nonmaximal.svg 109 :width: 250 px 110 111 112* It is also possible that two logical loops share a header, but are 113 considered a single loop by LLVM: 114 115.. code-block:: C 116 117 for (int i = 0; i < 128; ++i) 118 for (int j = 0; j < 128; ++j) 119 body(i,j); 120 121which might be represented in LLVM-IR as follows. Note that there is 122only a single header and hence just a single loop. 123 124.. image:: ./loop-merge.svg 125 :width: 400 px 126 127The :ref:`LoopSimplify <loop-terminology-loop-simplify>` pass will 128detect the loop and ensure separate headers for the outer and inner loop. 129 130.. image:: ./loop-separate.svg 131 :width: 400 px 132 133* A cycle in the CFG does not imply there is a loop. The example below 134 shows such a CFG, where there is no header node that dominates all 135 other nodes in the cycle. This is called **irreducible control-flow**. 136 137.. image:: ./loop-irreducible.svg 138 :width: 150 px 139 140The term reducible results from the ability to collapse the CFG into a 141single node by successively replacing one of three base structures with 142a single node: A sequential execution of basic blocks, a conditional 143branching (or switch) with re-joining, and a basic block looping on itself. 144`Wikipedia <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Control-flow_graph#Reducibility>`_ 145has a more formal definition, which basically says that every cycle has 146a dominating header. 147 148 149* Irreducible control-flow can occur at any level of the loop nesting. 150 That is, a loop that itself does not contain any loops can still have 151 cyclic control flow in its body; a loop that is not nested inside 152 another loop can still be part of an outer cycle; and there can be 153 additional cycles between any two loops where one is contained in the other. 154 155 156* Exiting edges are not the only way to break out of a loop. Other 157 possibilities are unreachable terminators, [[noreturn]] functions, 158 exceptions, signals, and your computer's power button. 159 160 161* A basic block "inside" the loop that does not have a path back to the 162 loop (i.e. to a latch or header) is not considered part of the loop. 163 This is illustrated by the following code. 164 165.. code-block:: C 166 167 for (unsigned i = 0; i <= n; ++i) { 168 if (c1) { 169 // When reaching this block, we will have exited the loop. 170 do_something(); 171 break; 172 } 173 if (c2) { 174 // abort(), never returns, so we have exited the loop. 175 abort(); 176 } 177 if (c3) { 178 // The unreachable allows the compiler to assume that this will not rejoin the loop. 179 do_something(); 180 __builtin_unreachable(); 181 } 182 if (c4) { 183 // This statically infinite loop is not nested because control-flow will not continue with the for-loop. 184 while(true) { 185 do_something(); 186 } 187 } 188 } 189 190 191* There is no requirement for the control flow to eventually leave the 192 loop, i.e. a loop can be infinite. A **statically infinite loop** is a 193 loop that has no exiting edges. A **dynamically infinite loop** has 194 exiting edges, but it is possible to be never taken. This may happen 195 only under some circumstances, such as when n == UINT_MAX in the code 196 below. 197 198.. code-block:: C 199 200 for (unsigned i = 0; i <= n; ++i) 201 body(i); 202 203It is possible for the optimizer to turn a dynamically infinite loop 204into a statically infinite loop, for instance when it can prove that the 205exiting condition is always false. Because the exiting edge is never 206taken, the optimizer can change the conditional branch into an 207unconditional one. 208 209Note that under some circumstances the compiler may assume that a loop will 210eventually terminate without proving it. For instance, it may remove a loop 211that does not do anything in its body. If the loop was infinite, this 212optimization resulted in an "infinite" performance speed-up. A call 213to the intrinsic :ref:`llvm.sideeffect<llvm_sideeffect>` can be added 214into the loop to ensure that the optimizer does not make this assumption 215without proof. 216 217 218* The number of executions of the loop header before leaving the loop is 219 the **loop trip count** (or **iteration count**). If the loop should 220 not be executed at all, a **loop guard** must skip the entire loop: 221 222.. image:: ./loop-guard.svg 223 :width: 500 px 224 225Since the first thing a loop header might do is to check whether there 226is another execution and if not, immediately exit without doing any work 227(also see :ref:`loop-terminology-loop-rotate`), loop trip count is not 228the best measure of a loop's number of iterations. For instance, the 229number of header executions of the code below for a non-positive n 230(before loop rotation) is 1, even though the loop body is not executed 231at all. 232 233.. code-block:: C 234 235 for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i) 236 body(i); 237 238A better measure is the **backedge-taken count**, which is the number of 239times any of the backedges is taken before the loop. It is one less than 240the trip count for executions that enter the header. 241 242 243.. _loopinfo: 244 245LoopInfo 246======== 247 248LoopInfo is the core analysis for obtaining information about loops. 249There are few key implications of the definitions given above which 250are important for working successfully with this interface. 251 252* LoopInfo does not contain information about non-loop cycles. As a 253 result, it is not suitable for any algorithm which requires complete 254 cycle detection for correctness. 255 256* LoopInfo provides an interface for enumerating all top level loops 257 (e.g. those not contained in any other loop). From there, you may 258 walk the tree of sub-loops rooted in that top level loop. 259 260* Loops which become statically unreachable during optimization *must* 261 be removed from LoopInfo. If this can not be done for some reason, 262 then the optimization is *required* to preserve the static 263 reachability of the loop. 264 265 266.. _loop-terminology-loop-simplify: 267 268Loop Simplify Form 269================== 270 271The Loop Simplify Form is a canonical form that makes 272several analyses and transformations simpler and more effective. 273It is ensured by the LoopSimplify 274(:ref:`-loop-simplify <passes-loop-simplify>`) pass and is automatically 275added by the pass managers when scheduling a LoopPass. 276This pass is implemented in 277`LoopSimplify.h <https://llvm.org/doxygen/LoopSimplify_8h_source.html>`_. 278When it is successful, the loop has: 279 280* A preheader. 281* A single backedge (which implies that there is a single latch). 282* Dedicated exits. That is, no exit block for the loop 283 has a predecessor that is outside the loop. This implies 284 that all exit blocks are dominated by the loop header. 285 286.. _loop-terminology-lcssa: 287 288Loop Closed SSA (LCSSA) 289======================= 290 291A program is in Loop Closed SSA Form if it is in SSA form 292and all values that are defined in a loop are used only inside 293this loop. 294 295Programs written in LLVM IR are always in SSA form but not necessarily 296in LCSSA. To achieve the latter, for each value that is live across the 297loop boundary, single entry PHI nodes are inserted to each of the exit blocks 298[#lcssa-construction]_ in order to "close" these values inside the loop. 299In particular, consider the following loop: 300 301.. code-block:: C 302 303 c = ...; 304 for (...) { 305 if (c) 306 X1 = ... 307 else 308 X2 = ... 309 X3 = phi(X1, X2); // X3 defined 310 } 311 312 ... = X3 + 4; // X3 used, i.e. live 313 // outside the loop 314 315In the inner loop, the X3 is defined inside the loop, but used 316outside of it. In Loop Closed SSA form, this would be represented as follows: 317 318.. code-block:: C 319 320 c = ...; 321 for (...) { 322 if (c) 323 X1 = ... 324 else 325 X2 = ... 326 X3 = phi(X1, X2); 327 } 328 X4 = phi(X3); 329 330 ... = X4 + 4; 331 332This is still valid LLVM; the extra phi nodes are purely redundant, 333but all LoopPass'es are required to preserve them. 334This form is ensured by the LCSSA (:ref:`-lcssa <passes-lcssa>`) 335pass and is added automatically by the LoopPassManager when 336scheduling a LoopPass. 337After the loop optimizations are done, these extra phi nodes 338will be deleted by :ref:`-instcombine <passes-instcombine>`. 339 340Note that an exit block is outside of a loop, so how can such a phi "close" 341the value inside the loop since it uses it outside of it ? First of all, 342for phi nodes, as 343`mentioned in the LangRef <https://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#id311>`_: 344"the use of each incoming value is deemed to occur on the edge from the 345corresponding predecessor block to the current block". Now, an 346edge to an exit block is considered outside of the loop because 347if we take that edge, it leads us clearly out of the loop. 348 349However, an edge doesn't actually contain any IR, so in source code, 350we have to choose a convention of whether the use happens in 351the current block or in the respective predecessor. For LCSSA's purpose, 352we consider the use happens in the latter (so as to consider the 353use inside) [#point-of-use-phis]_. 354 355The major benefit of LCSSA is that it makes many other loop optimizations 356simpler. 357 358First of all, a simple observation is that if one needs to see all 359the outside users, they can just iterate over all the (loop closing) 360PHI nodes in the exit blocks (the alternative would be to 361scan the def-use chain [#def-use-chain]_ of all instructions in the loop). 362 363Then, consider for example 364:ref:`-loop-unswitch <passes-loop-unswitch>` ing the loop above. 365Because it is in LCSSA form, we know that any value defined inside of 366the loop will be used either only inside the loop or in a loop closing 367PHI node. In this case, the only loop closing PHI node is X4. 368This means that we can just copy the loop and change the X4 369accordingly, like so: 370 371.. code-block:: C 372 373 c = ...; 374 if (c) { 375 for (...) { 376 if (true) 377 X1 = ... 378 else 379 X2 = ... 380 X3 = phi(X1, X2); 381 } 382 } else { 383 for (...) { 384 if (false) 385 X1' = ... 386 else 387 X2' = ... 388 X3' = phi(X1', X2'); 389 } 390 } 391 X4 = phi(X3, X3') 392 393Now, all uses of X4 will get the updated value (in general, 394if a loop is in LCSSA form, in any loop transformation, 395we only need to update the loop closing PHI nodes for the changes 396to take effect). If we did not have Loop Closed SSA form, it means that X3 could 397possibly be used outside the loop. So, we would have to introduce the 398X4 (which is the new X3) and replace all uses of X3 with that. 399However, we should note that because LLVM keeps a def-use chain 400[#def-use-chain]_ for each Value, we wouldn't need 401to perform data-flow analysis to find and replace all the uses 402(there is even a utility function, replaceAllUsesWith(), 403that performs this transformation by iterating the def-use chain). 404 405Another important advantage is that the behavior of all uses 406of an induction variable is the same. Without this, you need to 407distinguish the case when the variable is used outside of 408the loop it is defined in, for example: 409 410.. code-block:: C 411 412 for (i = 0; i < 100; i++) { 413 for (j = 0; j < 100; j++) { 414 k = i + j; 415 use(k); // use 1 416 } 417 use(k); // use 2 418 } 419 420Looking from the outer loop with the normal SSA form, the first use of k 421is not well-behaved, while the second one is an induction variable with 422base 100 and step 1. Although, in practice, and in the LLVM context, 423such cases can be handled effectively by SCEV. Scalar Evolution 424(:ref:`scalar-evolution <passes-scalar-evolution>`) or SCEV, is a 425(analysis) pass that analyzes and categorizes the evolution of scalar 426expressions in loops. 427 428In general, it's easier to use SCEV in loops that are in LCSSA form. 429The evolution of a scalar (loop-variant) expression that 430SCEV can analyze is, by definition, relative to a loop. 431An expression is represented in LLVM by an 432`llvm::Instruction <https://llvm.org/doxygen/classllvm_1_1Instruction.html>`_. 433If the expression is inside two (or more) loops (which can only 434happen if the loops are nested, like in the example above) and you want 435to get an analysis of its evolution (from SCEV), 436you have to also specify relative to what Loop you want it. 437Specifically, you have to use 438`getSCEVAtScope() <https://llvm.org/doxygen/classllvm_1_1ScalarEvolution.html#a21d6ee82eed29080d911dbb548a8bb68>`_. 439 440However, if all loops are in LCSSA form, each expression is actually 441represented by two different llvm::Instructions. One inside the loop 442and one outside, which is the loop-closing PHI node and represents 443the value of the expression after the last iteration (effectively, 444we break each loop-variant expression into two expressions and so, every 445expression is at most in one loop). You can now just use 446`getSCEV() <https://llvm.org/doxygen/classllvm_1_1ScalarEvolution.html#a30bd18ac905eacf3601bc6a553a9ff49>`_. 447and which of these two llvm::Instructions you pass to it disambiguates 448the context / scope / relative loop. 449 450.. rubric:: Footnotes 451 452.. [#lcssa-construction] To insert these loop-closing PHI nodes, one has to 453 (re-)compute dominance frontiers (if the loop has multiple exits). 454 455.. [#point-of-use-phis] Considering the point of use of a PHI entry value 456 to be in the respective predecessor is a convention across the whole LLVM. 457 The reason is mostly practical; for example it preserves the dominance 458 property of SSA. It is also just an overapproximation of the actual 459 number of uses; the incoming block could branch to another block in which 460 case the value is not actually used but there are no side-effects (it might 461 increase its live range which is not relevant in LCSSA though). 462 Furthermore, we can gain some intuition if we consider liveness: 463 A PHI is *usually* inserted in the current block because the value can't 464 be used from this point and onwards (i.e. the current block is a dominance 465 frontier). It doesn't make sense to consider that the value is used in 466 the current block (because of the PHI) since the value stops being live 467 before the PHI. In some sense the PHI definition just "replaces" the original 468 value definition and doesn't actually use it. It should be stressed that 469 this analogy is only used as an example and does not pose any strict 470 requirements. For example, the value might dominate the current block 471 but we can still insert a PHI (as we do with LCSSA PHI nodes) *and* 472 use the original value afterwards (in which case the two live ranges overlap, 473 although in LCSSA (the whole point is that) we never do that). 474 475 476.. [#def-use-chain] A property of SSA is that there exists a def-use chain 477 for each definition, which is a list of all the uses of this definition. 478 LLVM implements this property by keeping a list of all the uses of a Value 479 in an internal data structure. 480 481"More Canonical" Loops 482====================== 483 484.. _loop-terminology-loop-rotate: 485 486Rotated Loops 487------------- 488 489Loops are rotated by the LoopRotate (:ref:`loop-rotate <passes-loop-rotate>`) 490pass, which converts loops into do/while style loops and is 491implemented in 492`LoopRotation.h <https://llvm.org/doxygen/LoopRotation_8h_source.html>`_. Example: 493 494.. code-block:: C 495 496 void test(int n) { 497 for (int i = 0; i < n; i += 1) 498 // Loop body 499 } 500 501is transformed to: 502 503.. code-block:: C 504 505 void test(int n) { 506 int i = 0; 507 do { 508 // Loop body 509 i += 1; 510 } while (i < n); 511 } 512 513**Warning**: This transformation is valid only if the compiler 514can prove that the loop body will be executed at least once. Otherwise, 515it has to insert a guard which will test it at runtime. In the example 516above, that would be: 517 518.. code-block:: C 519 520 void test(int n) { 521 int i = 0; 522 if (n > 0) { 523 do { 524 // Loop body 525 i += 1; 526 } while (i < n); 527 } 528 } 529 530It's important to understand the effect of loop rotation 531at the LLVM IR level. We follow with the previous examples 532in LLVM IR while also providing a graphical representation 533of the control-flow graphs (CFG). You can get the same graphical 534results by utilizing the :ref:`view-cfg <passes-view-cfg>` pass. 535 536The initial **for** loop could be translated to: 537 538.. code-block:: none 539 540 define void @test(i32 %n) { 541 entry: 542 br label %for.header 543 544 for.header: 545 %i = phi i32 [ 0, %entry ], [ %i.next, %latch ] 546 %cond = icmp slt i32 %i, %n 547 br i1 %cond, label %body, label %exit 548 549 body: 550 ; Loop body 551 br label %latch 552 553 latch: 554 %i.next = add nsw i32 %i, 1 555 br label %for.header 556 557 exit: 558 ret void 559 } 560 561.. image:: ./loop-terminology-initial-loop.png 562 :width: 400 px 563 564Before we explain how LoopRotate will actually 565transform this loop, here's how we could convert 566it (by hand) to a do-while style loop. 567 568.. code-block:: none 569 570 define void @test(i32 %n) { 571 entry: 572 br label %body 573 574 body: 575 %i = phi i32 [ 0, %entry ], [ %i.next, %latch ] 576 ; Loop body 577 br label %latch 578 579 latch: 580 %i.next = add nsw i32 %i, 1 581 %cond = icmp slt i32 %i.next, %n 582 br i1 %cond, label %body, label %exit 583 584 exit: 585 ret void 586 } 587 588.. image:: ./loop-terminology-rotated-loop.png 589 :width: 400 px 590 591Note two things: 592 593* The condition check was moved to the "bottom" of the loop, i.e. 594 the latch. This is something that LoopRotate does by copying the header 595 of the loop to the latch. 596* The compiler in this case can't deduce that the loop will 597 definitely execute at least once so the above transformation 598 is not valid. As mentioned above, a guard has to be inserted, 599 which is something that LoopRotate will do. 600 601This is how LoopRotate transforms this loop: 602 603.. code-block:: none 604 605 define void @test(i32 %n) { 606 entry: 607 %guard_cond = icmp slt i32 0, %n 608 br i1 %guard_cond, label %loop.preheader, label %exit 609 610 loop.preheader: 611 br label %body 612 613 body: 614 %i2 = phi i32 [ 0, %loop.preheader ], [ %i.next, %latch ] 615 br label %latch 616 617 latch: 618 %i.next = add nsw i32 %i2, 1 619 %cond = icmp slt i32 %i.next, %n 620 br i1 %cond, label %body, label %loop.exit 621 622 loop.exit: 623 br label %exit 624 625 exit: 626 ret void 627 } 628 629.. image:: ./loop-terminology-guarded-loop.png 630 :width: 500 px 631 632The result is a little bit more complicated than we may expect 633because LoopRotate ensures that the loop is in 634:ref:`Loop Simplify Form <loop-terminology-loop-simplify>` 635after rotation. 636In this case, it inserted the %loop.preheader basic block so 637that the loop has a preheader and it introduced the %loop.exit 638basic block so that the loop has dedicated exits 639(otherwise, %exit would be jumped from both %latch and %entry, 640but %entry is not contained in the loop). 641Note that a loop has to be in Loop Simplify Form beforehand 642too for LoopRotate to be applied successfully. 643 644The main advantage of this form is that it allows hoisting 645invariant instructions, especially loads, into the preheader. 646That could be done in non-rotated loops as well but with 647some disadvantages. Let's illustrate them with an example: 648 649.. code-block:: C 650 651 for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i) { 652 auto v = *p; 653 use(v); 654 } 655 656We assume that loading from p is invariant and use(v) is some 657statement that uses v. 658If we wanted to execute the load only once we could move it 659"out" of the loop body, resulting in this: 660 661.. code-block:: C 662 663 auto v = *p; 664 for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i) { 665 use(v); 666 } 667 668However, now, in the case that n <= 0, in the initial form, 669the loop body would never execute, and so, the load would 670never execute. This is a problem mainly for semantic reasons. 671Consider the case in which n <= 0 and loading from p is invalid. 672In the initial program there would be no error. However, with this 673transformation we would introduce one, effectively breaking 674the initial semantics. 675 676To avoid both of these problems, we can insert a guard: 677 678.. code-block:: C 679 680 if (n > 0) { // loop guard 681 auto v = *p; 682 for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i) { 683 use(v); 684 } 685 } 686 687This is certainly better but it could be improved slightly. Notice 688that the check for whether n is bigger than 0 is executed twice (and 689n does not change in between). Once when we check the guard condition 690and once in the first execution of the loop. To avoid that, we could 691do an unconditional first execution and insert the loop condition 692in the end. This effectively means transforming the loop into a do-while loop: 693 694.. code-block:: C 695 696 if (0 < n) { 697 auto v = *p; 698 do { 699 use(v); 700 ++i; 701 } while (i < n); 702 } 703 704Note that LoopRotate does not generally do such 705hoisting. Rather, it is an enabling transformation for other 706passes like Loop-Invariant Code Motion (:ref:`-licm <passes-licm>`). 707