To optimize code effectively, compilers must deal with memory dependencies. However, the state-of-the-art heuristics available in the literature to track memory dependencies are inherently imprecise and computationally expensive. Consequently, the most advanced code transformations that compilers have today are ineffective when applied on real-world programs. The goal of this paper is to solve this conundrum through dynamic disambiguation of pointers. We provide different ways to determine at runtime when two memory locations can overlap. We then produce two versions of a code region: one that is aliasing-free - hence, easy to optimize - and another that is not. Our checks let us safely branch to the optimizable region. We have applied these ideas on Polly-LLVM, a loop optimizer built on top of the LLVM compilation infrastructure. Our experiments indicate that our method is precise, effective and useful: we can disambiguate every pair of pointer in the loop intensive Polybench benchmark suite. The result of this precision is code quality: the binaries we generate are 10% faster than those that Polly-LLVM produces without our optimization, at the -O3 optimization level of LLVM.
Directive-based programming models, such as OpenACC and OpenMP, allow developers to convert a sequential program into a parallel one with minimum human intervention. However, inserting pragmas into production code is a difficult and error-prone task, often requiring familiarity with the target program. This difficulty restricts the ability of developers to annotate code that they have not written themselves. This article provides a suite of compiler-related methods to mitigate this problem. Such techniques rely on symbolic range analysis, a well-known static technique, to achieve two purposes: populate source code with data transfer primitives and to disambiguate pointers that could hinder automatic parallelization due to aliasing. We have materialized our ideas into a tool, DawnCC, which can be used stand-alone or through an online interface. To demonstrate its effectiveness, we show how DawnCC can annotate the programs available in PolyBench without any intervention from users. Such annotations lead to speedups of over 100× in an Nvidia architecture and over 50× in an ARM architecture.
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