| ==================================================== |
| Using -opt-bisect-limit to debug optimization errors |
| ==================================================== |
| .. contents:: |
| :local: |
| :depth: 1 |
| |
| Introduction |
| ============ |
| |
| The -opt-bisect-limit option provides a way to disable all optimization passes |
| above a specified limit without modifying the way in which the Pass Managers |
| are populated. The intention of this option is to assist in tracking down |
| problems where incorrect transformations during optimization result in incorrect |
| run-time behavior. |
| |
| This feature is implemented on an opt-in basis. Passes which can be safely |
| skipped while still allowing correct code generation call a function to |
| check the opt-bisect limit before performing optimizations. Passes which |
| either must be run or do not modify the IR do not perform this check and are |
| therefore never skipped. Generally, this means analysis passes, passes |
| that are run at CodeGenOpt::None and passes which are required for register |
| allocation. |
| |
| The -opt-bisect-limit option can be used with any tool, including front ends |
| such as clang, that uses the core LLVM library for optimization and code |
| generation. The exact syntax for invoking the option is discussed below. |
| |
| This feature is not intended to replace other debugging tools such as bugpoint. |
| Rather it provides an alternate course of action when reproducing the problem |
| requires a complex build infrastructure that would make using bugpoint |
| impractical or when reproducing the failure requires a sequence of |
| transformations that is difficult to replicate with tools like opt and llc. |
| |
| |
| Getting Started |
| =============== |
| |
| The -opt-bisect-limit command line option can be passed directly to tools such |
| as opt, llc and lli. The syntax is as follows: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| <tool name> [other options] -opt-bisect-limit=<limit> |
| |
| If a value of -1 is used the tool will perform all optimizations but a message |
| will be printed to stderr for each optimization that could be skipped |
| indicating the index value that is associated with that optimization. To skip |
| optimizations, pass the value of the last optimization to be performed as the |
| opt-bisect-limit. All optimizations with a higher index value will be skipped. |
| |
| In order to use the -opt-bisect-limit option with a driver that provides a |
| wrapper around the LLVM core library, an additional prefix option may be |
| required, as defined by the driver. For example, to use this option with |
| clang, the "-mllvm" prefix must be used. A typical clang invocation would look |
| like this: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| clang -O2 -mllvm -opt-bisect-limit=256 my_file.c |
| |
| The -opt-bisect-limit option may also be applied to link-time optimizations by |
| using a prefix to indicate that this is a plug-in option for the linker. The |
| following syntax will set a bisect limit for LTO transformations: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| # When using lld, or ld64 (macOS) |
| clang -flto -Wl,-mllvm,-opt-bisect-limit=256 my_file.o my_other_file.o |
| # When using Gold |
| clang -flto -Wl,-plugin-opt,-opt-bisect-limit=256 my_file.o my_other_file.o |
| |
| LTO passes are run by a library instance invoked by the linker. Therefore any |
| passes run in the primary driver compilation phase are not affected by options |
| passed via '-Wl,-plugin-opt' and LTO passes are not affected by options |
| passed to the driver-invoked LLVM invocation via '-mllvm'. |
| |
| |
| Bisection Index Values |
| ====================== |
| |
| The granularity of the optimizations associated with a single index value is |
| variable. Depending on how the optimization pass has been instrumented the |
| value may be associated with as much as all transformations that would have |
| been performed by an optimization pass on an IR unit for which it is invoked |
| (for instance, during a single call of runOnFunction for a FunctionPass) or as |
| little as a single transformation. The index values may also be nested so that |
| if an invocation of the pass is not skipped individual transformations within |
| that invocation may still be skipped. |
| |
| The order of the values assigned is guaranteed to remain stable and consistent |
| from one run to the next up to and including the value specified as the limit. |
| Above the limit value skipping of optimizations can cause a change in the |
| numbering, but because all optimizations above the limit are skipped this |
| is not a problem. |
| |
| When an opt-bisect index value refers to an entire invocation of the run |
| function for a pass, the pass will query whether or not it should be skipped |
| each time it is invoked and each invocation will be assigned a unique value. |
| For example, if a FunctionPass is used with a module containing three functions |
| a different index value will be assigned to the pass for each of the functions |
| as the pass is run. The pass may be run on two functions but skipped for the |
| third. |
| |
| If the pass internally performs operations on a smaller IR unit the pass must be |
| specifically instrumented to enable bisection at this finer level of granularity |
| (see below for details). |
| |
| |
| Example Usage |
| ============= |
| |
| .. code-block:: console |
| |
| $ opt -O2 -o test-opt.bc -opt-bisect-limit=16 test.ll |
| |
| BISECT: running pass (1) Simplify the CFG on function (g) |
| BISECT: running pass (2) SROA on function (g) |
| BISECT: running pass (3) Early CSE on function (g) |
| BISECT: running pass (4) Infer set function attributes on module (test.ll) |
| BISECT: running pass (5) Interprocedural Sparse Conditional Constant Propagation on module (test.ll) |
| BISECT: running pass (6) Global Variable Optimizer on module (test.ll) |
| BISECT: running pass (7) Promote Memory to Register on function (g) |
| BISECT: running pass (8) Dead Argument Elimination on module (test.ll) |
| BISECT: running pass (9) Combine redundant instructions on function (g) |
| BISECT: running pass (10) Simplify the CFG on function (g) |
| BISECT: running pass (11) Remove unused exception handling info on SCC (<<null function>>) |
| BISECT: running pass (12) Function Integration/Inlining on SCC (<<null function>>) |
| BISECT: running pass (13) Deduce function attributes on SCC (<<null function>>) |
| BISECT: running pass (14) Remove unused exception handling info on SCC (f) |
| BISECT: running pass (15) Function Integration/Inlining on SCC (f) |
| BISECT: running pass (16) Deduce function attributes on SCC (f) |
| BISECT: NOT running pass (17) Remove unused exception handling info on SCC (g) |
| BISECT: NOT running pass (18) Function Integration/Inlining on SCC (g) |
| BISECT: NOT running pass (19) Deduce function attributes on SCC (g) |
| BISECT: NOT running pass (20) SROA on function (g) |
| BISECT: NOT running pass (21) Early CSE on function (g) |
| BISECT: NOT running pass (22) Speculatively execute instructions if target has divergent branches on function (g) |
| ... etc. ... |
| |
| |
| Pass Skipping Implementation |
| ============================ |
| |
| The -opt-bisect-limit implementation depends on individual passes opting in to |
| the opt-bisect process. The OptBisect object that manages the process is |
| entirely passive and has no knowledge of how any pass is implemented. When a |
| pass is run if the pass may be skipped, it should call the OptBisect object to |
| see if it should be skipped. |
| |
| The OptBisect object is intended to be accessed through LLVMContext and each |
| Pass base class contains a helper function that abstracts the details in order |
| to make this check uniform across all passes. These helper functions are: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| bool ModulePass::skipModule(Module &M); |
| bool CallGraphSCCPass::skipSCC(CallGraphSCC &SCC); |
| bool FunctionPass::skipFunction(const Function &F); |
| bool BasicBlockPass::skipBasicBlock(const BasicBlock &BB); |
| bool LoopPass::skipLoop(const Loop *L); |
| |
| A MachineFunctionPass should use FunctionPass::skipFunction() as such: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| bool MyMachineFunctionPass::runOnMachineFunction(Function &MF) { |
| if (skipFunction(*MF.getFunction()) |
| return false; |
| // Otherwise, run the pass normally. |
| } |
| |
| In addition to checking with the OptBisect class to see if the pass should be |
| skipped, the skipFunction(), skipLoop() and skipBasicBlock() helper functions |
| also look for the presence of the "optnone" function attribute. The calling |
| pass will be unable to determine whether it is being skipped because the |
| "optnone" attribute is present or because the opt-bisect-limit has been |
| reached. This is desirable because the behavior should be the same in either |
| case. |
| |
| The majority of LLVM passes which can be skipped have already been instrumented |
| in the manner described above. If you are adding a new pass or believe you |
| have found a pass which is not being included in the opt-bisect process but |
| should be, you can add it as described above. |
| |
| |
| Adding Finer Granularity |
| ======================== |
| |
| Once the pass in which an incorrect transformation is performed has been |
| determined, it may be useful to perform further analysis in order to determine |
| which specific transformation is causing the problem. Debug counters |
| can be used for this purpose. |