//===- Parsing, selection, and construction of pass pipelines --*- C++ -*--===//
//
// The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
//
// This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source
// License. See LICENSE.TXT for details.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
/// \file
///
/// Interfaces for registering analysis passes, producing common pass manager
/// configurations, and parsing of pass pipelines.
///
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
#ifndef LLVM_PASSES_PASSBUILDER_H
#define LLVM_PASSES_PASSBUILDER_H
#include "llvm/ADT/Optional.h"
#include "llvm/Analysis/CGSCCPassManager.h"
#include "llvm/IR/PassManager.h"
#include "llvm/Support/Error.h"
#include "llvm/Transforms/Instrumentation.h"
#include "llvm/Transforms/Scalar/LoopPassManager.h"
#include <vector>
namespace llvm {
class StringRef;
class AAManager;
class TargetMachine;
class ModuleSummaryIndex;
/// A struct capturing PGO tunables.
struct PGOOptions {
PGOOptions(std::string ProfileGenFile = "", std::string ProfileUseFile = "",
std::string SampleProfileFile = "",
std::string ProfileRemappingFile = "",
bool RunProfileGen = false, bool SamplePGOSupport = false)
: ProfileGenFile(ProfileGenFile), ProfileUseFile(ProfileUseFile),
SampleProfileFile(SampleProfileFile),
ProfileRemappingFile(ProfileRemappingFile),
RunProfileGen(RunProfileGen),
SamplePGOSupport(SamplePGOSupport || !SampleProfileFile.empty()) {
assert((RunProfileGen ||
!SampleProfileFile.empty() ||
!ProfileUseFile.empty() ||
SamplePGOSupport) && "Illegal PGOOptions.");
}
std::string ProfileGenFile;
std::string ProfileUseFile;
std::string SampleProfileFile;
std::string ProfileRemappingFile;
bool RunProfileGen;
bool SamplePGOSupport;
};
/// This class provides access to building LLVM's passes.
///
/// It's members provide the baseline state available to passes during their
/// construction. The \c PassRegistry.def file specifies how to construct all
/// of the built-in passes, and those may reference these members during
/// construction.
class PassBuilder {
TargetMachine *TM;
Optional<PGOOptions> PGOOpt;
PassInstrumentationCallbacks *PIC;
public:
/// A struct to capture parsed pass pipeline names.
///
/// A pipeline is defined as a series of names, each of which may in itself
/// recursively contain a nested pipeline. A name is either the name of a pass
/// (e.g. "instcombine") or the name of a pipeline type (e.g. "cgscc"). If the
/// name is the name of a pass, the InnerPipeline is empty, since passes
/// cannot contain inner pipelines. See parsePassPipeline() for a more
/// detailed description of the textual pipeline format.
struct PipelineElement {
StringRef Name;
std::vector<PipelineElement> InnerPipeline;
};
/// ThinLTO phase.
///
/// This enumerates the LLVM ThinLTO optimization phases.
enum class ThinLTOPhase {
/// No ThinLTO behavior needed.
None,
// ThinLTO prelink (summary) phase.
PreLink,
// ThinLTO postlink (backend compile) phase.
PostLink
};
/// LLVM-provided high-level optimization levels.
///
/// This enumerates the LLVM-provided high-level optimization levels. Each
/// level has a specific goal and rationale.
enum OptimizationLevel {
/// Disable as many optimizations as possible. This doesn't completely
/// disable the optimizer in all cases, for example always_inline functions
/// can be required to be inlined for correctness.
O0,
/// Optimize quickly without destroying debuggability.
///
/// FIXME: The current and historical behavior of this level does *not*
/// agree with this goal, but we would like to move toward this goal in the
/// future.
///
/// This level is tuned to produce a result from the optimizer as quickly
/// as possible and to avoid destroying debuggability. This tends to result
/// in a very good development mode where the compiled code will be
/// immediately executed as part of testing. As a consequence, where
/// possible, we would like to produce efficient-to-execute code, but not
/// if it significantly slows down compilation or would prevent even basic
/// debugging of the resulting binary.
///
/// As an example, complex loop transformations such as versioning,
/// vectorization, or fusion might not make sense here due to the degree to
/// which the executed code would differ from the source code, and the
/// potential compile time cost.
O1,
/// Optimize for fast execution as much as possible without triggering
/// significant incremental compile time or code size growth.
///
/// The key idea is that optimizations at this level should "pay for
/// themselves". So if an optimization increases compile time by 5% or
/// increases code size by 5% for a particular benchmark, that benchmark
/// should also be one which sees a 5% runtime improvement. If the compile
/// time or code size penalties happen on average across a diverse range of
/// LLVM users' benchmarks, then the improvements should as well.
///
/// And no matter what, the compile time needs to not grow superlinearly
/// with the size of input to LLVM so that users can control the runtime of
/// the optimizer in this mode.
///
/// This is expected to be a good default optimization level for the vast
/// majority of users.
O2,
/// Optimize for fast execution as much as possible.
///
/// This mode is significantly more aggressive in trading off compile time
/// and code size to get execution time improvements. The core idea is that
/// this mode should include any optimization that helps execution time on
/// balance across a diverse collection of benchmarks, even if it increases
/// code size or compile time for some benchmarks without corresponding
/// improvements to execution time.
///
/// Despite being willing to trade more compile time off to get improved
/// execution time, this mode still tries to avoid superlinear growth in
/// order to make even significantly slower compile times at least scale
/// reasonably. This does not preclude very substantial constant factor
/// costs though.
O3,
/// Similar to \c O2 but tries to optimize for small code size instead of
/// fast execution without triggering significant incremental execution
/// time slowdowns.
///
/// The logic here is exactly the same as \c O2, but with code size and
/// execution time metrics swapped.
///
/// A consequence of the different core goal is that this should in general
/// produce substantially smaller executables that still run in
/// a reasonable amount of time.
Os,
/// A very specialized mode that will optimize for code size at any and all
/// costs.
///
/// This is useful primarily when there are absolute size limitations and
/// any effort taken to reduce the size is worth it regardless of the
/// execution time impact. You should expect this level to produce rather
/// slow, but very small, code.
Oz
};
explicit PassBuilder(TargetMachine *TM = nullptr,
Optional<PGOOptions> PGOOpt = None,
PassInstrumentationCallbacks *PIC = nullptr)
: TM(TM), PGOOpt(PGOOpt), PIC(PIC) {}
/// Cross register the analysis managers through their proxies.
///
/// This is an interface that can be used to cross register each
// AnalysisManager with all the others analysis managers.
void crossRegisterProxies(LoopAnalysisManager &LAM,
FunctionAnalysisManager &FAM,
CGSCCAnalysisManager &CGAM,
ModuleAnalysisManager &MAM);
/// Registers all available module analysis passes.
///
/// This is an interface that can be used to populate a \c
/// ModuleAnalysisManager with all registered module analyses. Callers can
/// still manually register any additional analyses. Callers can also
/// pre-register analyses and this will not override those.
void registerModuleAnalyses(ModuleAnalysisManager &MAM);
/// Registers all available CGSCC analysis passes.
///
/// This is an interface that can be used to populate a \c CGSCCAnalysisManager
/// with all registered CGSCC analyses. Callers can still manually register any
/// additional analyses. Callers can also pre-register analyses and this will
/// not override those.
void registerCGSCCAnalyses(CGSCCAnalysisManager &CGAM);
/// Registers all available function analysis passes.
///
/// This is an interface that can be used to populate a \c
/// FunctionAnalysisManager with all registered function analyses. Callers can
/// still manually register any additional analyses. Callers can also
/// pre-register analyses and this will not override those.
void registerFunctionAnalyses(FunctionAnalysisManager &FAM);
/// Registers all available loop analysis passes.
///
/// This is an interface that can be used to populate a \c LoopAnalysisManager
/// with all registered loop analyses. Callers can still manually register any
/// additional analyses.
void registerLoopAnalyses(LoopAnalysisManager &LAM);
/// Construct the core LLVM function canonicalization and simplification
/// pipeline.
///
/// This is a long pipeline and uses most of the per-function optimization
/// passes in LLVM to canonicalize and simplify the IR. It is suitable to run
/// repeatedly over the IR and is not expected to destroy important
/// information about the semantics of the IR.
///
/// Note that \p Level cannot be `O0` here. The pipelines produced are
/// only intended for use when attempting to optimize code. If frontends
/// require some transformations for semantic reasons, they should explicitly
/// build them.
///
/// \p Phase indicates the current ThinLTO phase.
FunctionPassManager
buildFunctionSimplificationPipeline(OptimizationLevel Level,
ThinLTOPhase Phase,
bool DebugLogging = false);
/// Construct the core LLVM module canonicalization and simplification
/// pipeline.
///
/// This pipeline focuses on canonicalizing and simplifying the entire module
/// of IR. Much like the function simplification pipeline above, it is
/// suitable to run repeatedly over the IR and is not expected to destroy
/// important information. It does, however, perform inlining and other
/// heuristic based simplifications that are not strictly reversible.
///
/// Note that \p Level cannot be `O0` here. The pipelines produced are
/// only intended for use when attempting to optimize code. If frontends
/// require some transformations for semantic reasons, they should explicitly
/// build them.
///
/// \p Phase indicates the current ThinLTO phase.
ModulePassManager
buildModuleSimplificationPipeline(OptimizationLevel Level,
ThinLTOPhase Phase,
bool DebugLogging = false);
/// Construct the core LLVM module optimization pipeline.
///
/// This pipeline focuses on optimizing the execution speed of the IR. It
/// uses cost modeling and thresholds to balance code growth against runtime
/// improvements. It includes vectorization and other information destroying
/// transformations. It also cannot generally be run repeatedly on a module
/// without potentially seriously regressing either runtime performance of
/// the code or serious code size growth.
///
/// Note that \p Level cannot be `O0` here. The pipelines produced are
/// only intended for use when attempting to optimize code. If frontends
/// require some transformations for semantic reasons, they should explicitly
/// build them.
ModulePassManager buildModuleOptimizationPipeline(OptimizationLevel Level,
bool DebugLogging = false);
/// Build a per-module default optimization pipeline.
///
/// This provides a good default optimization pipeline for per-module
/// optimization and code generation without any link-time optimization. It
/// typically correspond to frontend "-O[123]" options for optimization
/// levels \c O1, \c O2 and \c O3 resp.
///
/// Note that \p Level cannot be `O0` here. The pipelines produced are
/// only intended for use when attempting to optimize code. If frontends
/// require some transformations for semantic reasons, they should explicitly
/// build them.
ModulePassManager buildPerModuleDefaultPipeline(OptimizationLevel Level,
bool DebugLogging = false);
/// Build a pre-link, ThinLTO-targeting default optimization pipeline to
/// a pass manager.
///
/// This adds the pre-link optimizations tuned to prepare a module for
/// a ThinLTO run. It works to minimize the IR which needs to be analyzed
/// without making irreversible decisions which could be made better during
/// the LTO run.
///
/// Note that \p Level cannot be `O0` here. The pipelines produced are
/// only intended for use when attempting to optimize code. If frontends
/// require some transformations for semantic reasons, they should explicitly
/// build them.
ModulePassManager
buildThinLTOPreLinkDefaultPipeline(OptimizationLevel Level,
bool DebugLogging = false);
/// Build an ThinLTO default optimization pipeline to a pass manager.
///
/// This provides a good default optimization pipeline for link-time
/// optimization and code generation. It is particularly tuned to fit well
/// when IR coming into the LTO phase was first run through \c
/// addPreLinkLTODefaultPipeline, and the two coordinate closely.
///
/// Note that \p Level cannot be `O0` here. The pipelines produced are
/// only intended for use when attempting to optimize code. If frontends
/// require some transformations for semantic reasons, they should explicitly
/// build them.
ModulePassManager
buildThinLTODefaultPipeline(OptimizationLevel Level, bool DebugLogging,
const ModuleSummaryIndex *ImportSummary);
/// Build a pre-link, LTO-targeting default optimization pipeline to a pass
/// manager.
///
/// This adds the pre-link optimizations tuned to work well with a later LTO
/// run. It works to minimize the IR which needs to be analyzed without
/// making irreversible decisions which could be made better during the LTO
/// run.
///
/// Note that \p Level cannot be `O0` here. The pipelines produced are
/// only intended for use when attempting to optimize code. If frontends
/// require some transformations for semantic reasons, they should explicitly
/// build them.
ModulePassManager buildLTOPreLinkDefaultPipeline(OptimizationLevel Level,
bool DebugLogging = false);
/// Build an LTO default optimization pipeline to a pass manager.
///
/// This provides a good default optimization pipeline for link-time
/// optimization and code generation. It is particularly tuned to fit well
/// when IR coming into the LTO phase was first run through \c
/// addPreLinkLTODefaultPipeline, and the two coordinate closely.
///
/// Note that \p Level cannot be `O0` here. The pipelines produced are
/// only intended for use when attempting to optimize code. If frontends
/// require some transformations for semantic reasons, they should explicitly
/// build them.
ModulePassManager buildLTODefaultPipeline(OptimizationLevel Level,
bool DebugLogging,
ModuleSummaryIndex *ExportSummary);
/// Build the default `AAManager` with the default alias analysis pipeline
/// registered.
AAManager buildDefaultAAPipeline();
/// Parse a textual pass pipeline description into a \c
/// ModulePassManager.
///
/// The format of the textual pass pipeline description looks something like:
///
/// module(function(instcombine,sroa),dce,cgscc(inliner,function(...)),...)
///
/// Pass managers have ()s describing the nest structure of passes. All passes
/// are comma separated. As a special shortcut, if the very first pass is not
/// a module pass (as a module pass manager is), this will automatically form
/// the shortest stack of pass managers that allow inserting that first pass.
/// So, assuming function passes 'fpassN', CGSCC passes 'cgpassN', and loop
/// passes 'lpassN', all of these are valid:
///
/// fpass1,fpass2,fpass3
/// cgpass1,cgpass2,cgpass3
/// lpass1,lpass2,lpass3
///
/// And they are equivalent to the following (resp.):
///
/// module(function(fpass1,fpass2,fpass3))
/// module(cgscc(cgpass1,cgpass2,cgpass3))
/// module(function(loop(lpass1,lpass2,lpass3)))
///
/// This shortcut is especially useful for debugging and testing small pass
/// combinations. Note that these shortcuts don't introduce any other magic.
/// If the sequence of passes aren't all the exact same kind of pass, it will
/// be an error. You cannot mix different levels implicitly, you must
/// explicitly form a pass manager in which to nest passes.
Error parsePassPipeline(ModulePassManager &MPM, StringRef PipelineText,
bool VerifyEachPass = true,
bool DebugLogging = false);
/// {{@ Parse a textual pass pipeline description into a specific PassManager
///
/// Automatic deduction of an appropriate pass manager stack is not supported.
/// For example, to insert a loop pass 'lpass' into a FunctinoPassManager,
/// this is the valid pipeline text:
///
/// function(lpass)
Error parsePassPipeline(CGSCCPassManager &CGPM, StringRef PipelineText,
bool VerifyEachPass = true,
bool DebugLogging = false);
Error parsePassPipeline(FunctionPassManager &FPM, StringRef PipelineText,
bool VerifyEachPass = true,
bool DebugLogging = false);
Error parsePassPipeline(LoopPassManager &LPM, StringRef PipelineText,
bool VerifyEachPass = true,
bool DebugLogging = false);
/// @}}
/// Parse a textual alias analysis pipeline into the provided AA manager.
///
/// The format of the textual AA pipeline is a comma separated list of AA
/// pass names:
///
/// basic-aa,globals-aa,...
///
/// The AA manager is set up such that the provided alias analyses are tried
/// in the order specified. See the \c AAManaager documentation for details
/// about the logic used. This routine just provides the textual mapping
/// between AA names and the analyses to register with the manager.
///
/// Returns false if the text cannot be parsed cleanly. The specific state of
/// the \p AA manager is unspecified if such an error is encountered and this
/// returns false.
Error parseAAPipeline(AAManager &AA, StringRef PipelineText);
/// Register a callback for a default optimizer pipeline extension
/// point
///
/// This extension point allows adding passes that perform peephole
/// optimizations similar to the instruction combiner. These passes will be
/// inserted after each instance of the instruction combiner pass.
void registerPeepholeEPCallback(
const std::function<void(FunctionPassManager &, OptimizationLevel)> &C) {
PeepholeEPCallbacks.push_back(C);
}
/// Register a callback for a default optimizer pipeline extension
/// point
///
/// This extension point allows adding late loop canonicalization and
/// simplification passes. This is the last point in the loop optimization
/// pipeline before loop deletion. Each pass added
/// here must be an instance of LoopPass.
/// This is the place to add passes that can remove loops, such as target-
/// specific loop idiom recognition.
void registerLateLoopOptimizationsEPCallback(
const std::function<void(LoopPassManager &, OptimizationLevel)> &C) {
LateLoopOptimizationsEPCallbacks.push_back(C);
}
/// Register a callback for a default optimizer pipeline extension
/// point
///
/// This extension point allows adding loop passes to the end of the loop
/// optimizer.
void registerLoopOptimizerEndEPCallback(
const std::function<void(LoopPassManager &, OptimizationLevel)> &C) {
LoopOptimizerEndEPCallbacks.push_back(C);
}
/// Register a callback for a default optimizer pipeline extension
/// point
///
/// This extension point allows adding optimization passes after most of the
/// main optimizations, but before the last cleanup-ish optimizations.
void registerScalarOptimizerLateEPCallback(
const std::function<void(FunctionPassManager &, OptimizationLevel)> &C) {
ScalarOptimizerLateEPCallbacks.push_back(C);
}
/// Register a callback for a default optimizer pipeline extension
/// point
///
/// This extension point allows adding CallGraphSCC passes at the end of the
/// main CallGraphSCC passes and before any function simplification passes run
/// by CGPassManager.
void registerCGSCCOptimizerLateEPCallback(
const std::function<void(CGSCCPassManager &, OptimizationLevel)> &C) {
CGSCCOptimizerLateEPCallbacks.push_back(C);
}
/// Register a callback for a default optimizer pipeline extension
/// point
///
/// This extension point allows adding optimization passes before the
/// vectorizer and other highly target specific optimization passes are
/// executed.
void registerVectorizerStartEPCallback(
const std::function<void(FunctionPassManager &, OptimizationLevel)> &C) {
VectorizerStartEPCallbacks.push_back(C);
}
/// Register a callback for a default optimizer pipeline extension point.
///
/// This extension point allows adding optimization once at the start of the
/// pipeline. This does not apply to 'backend' compiles (LTO and ThinLTO
/// link-time pipelines).
void registerPipelineStartEPCallback(
const std::function<void(ModulePassManager &)> &C) {
PipelineStartEPCallbacks.push_back(C);
}
/// Register a callback for parsing an AliasAnalysis Name to populate
/// the given AAManager \p AA
void registerParseAACallback(
const std::function<bool(StringRef Name, AAManager &AA)> &C) {
AAParsingCallbacks.push_back(C);
}
/// {{@ Register callbacks for analysis registration with this PassBuilder
/// instance.
/// Callees register their analyses with the given AnalysisManager objects.
void registerAnalysisRegistrationCallback(
const std::function<void(CGSCCAnalysisManager &)> &C) {
CGSCCAnalysisRegistrationCallbacks.push_back(C);
}
void registerAnalysisRegistrationCallback(
const std::function<void(FunctionAnalysisManager &)> &C) {
FunctionAnalysisRegistrationCallbacks.push_back(C);
}
void registerAnalysisRegistrationCallback(
const std::function<void(LoopAnalysisManager &)> &C) {
LoopAnalysisRegistrationCallbacks.push_back(C);
}
void registerAnalysisRegistrationCallback(
const std::function<void(ModuleAnalysisManager &)> &C) {
ModuleAnalysisRegistrationCallbacks.push_back(C);
}
/// @}}
/// {{@ Register pipeline parsing callbacks with this pass builder instance.
/// Using these callbacks, callers can parse both a single pass name, as well
/// as entire sub-pipelines, and populate the PassManager instance
/// accordingly.
void registerPipelineParsingCallback(
const std::function<bool(StringRef Name, CGSCCPassManager &,
ArrayRef<PipelineElement>)> &C) {
CGSCCPipelineParsingCallbacks.push_back(C);
}
void registerPipelineParsingCallback(
const std::function<bool(StringRef Name, FunctionPassManager &,
ArrayRef<PipelineElement>)> &C) {
FunctionPipelineParsingCallbacks.push_back(C);
}
void registerPipelineParsingCallback(
const std::function<bool(StringRef Name, LoopPassManager &,
ArrayRef<PipelineElement>)> &C) {
LoopPipelineParsingCallbacks.push_back(C);
}
void registerPipelineParsingCallback(
const std::function<bool(StringRef Name, ModulePassManager &,
ArrayRef<PipelineElement>)> &C) {
ModulePipelineParsingCallbacks.push_back(C);
}
/// @}}
/// Register a callback for a top-level pipeline entry.
///
/// If the PassManager type is not given at the top level of the pipeline
/// text, this Callback should be used to determine the appropriate stack of
/// PassManagers and populate the passed ModulePassManager.
void registerParseTopLevelPipelineCallback(
const std::function<bool(ModulePassManager &, ArrayRef<PipelineElement>,
bool VerifyEachPass, bool DebugLogging)> &C) {
TopLevelPipelineParsingCallbacks.push_back(C);
}
private:
static Optional<std::vector<PipelineElement>>
parsePipelineText(StringRef Text);
Error parseModulePass(ModulePassManager &MPM, const PipelineElement &E,
bool VerifyEachPass, bool DebugLogging);
Error parseCGSCCPass(CGSCCPassManager &CGPM, const PipelineElement &E,
bool VerifyEachPass, bool DebugLogging);
Error parseFunctionPass(FunctionPassManager &FPM, const PipelineElement &E,
bool VerifyEachPass, bool DebugLogging);
Error parseLoopPass(LoopPassManager &LPM, const PipelineElement &E,
bool VerifyEachPass, bool DebugLogging);
bool parseAAPassName(AAManager &AA, StringRef Name);
Error parseLoopPassPipeline(LoopPassManager &LPM,
ArrayRef<PipelineElement> Pipeline,
bool VerifyEachPass, bool DebugLogging);
Error parseFunctionPassPipeline(FunctionPassManager &FPM,
ArrayRef<PipelineElement> Pipeline,
bool VerifyEachPass, bool DebugLogging);
Error parseCGSCCPassPipeline(CGSCCPassManager &CGPM,
ArrayRef<PipelineElement> Pipeline,
bool VerifyEachPass, bool DebugLogging);
Error parseModulePassPipeline(ModulePassManager &MPM,
ArrayRef<PipelineElement> Pipeline,
bool VerifyEachPass, bool DebugLogging);
void addPGOInstrPasses(ModulePassManager &MPM, bool DebugLogging,
OptimizationLevel Level, bool RunProfileGen,
std::string ProfileGenFile,
std::string ProfileUseFile,
std::string ProfileRemappingFile);
void invokePeepholeEPCallbacks(FunctionPassManager &, OptimizationLevel);
// Extension Point callbacks
SmallVector<std::function<void(FunctionPassManager &, OptimizationLevel)>, 2>
PeepholeEPCallbacks;
SmallVector<std::function<void(LoopPassManager &, OptimizationLevel)>, 2>
LateLoopOptimizationsEPCallbacks;
SmallVector<std::function<void(LoopPassManager &, OptimizationLevel)>, 2>
LoopOptimizerEndEPCallbacks;
SmallVector<std::function<void(FunctionPassManager &, OptimizationLevel)>, 2>
ScalarOptimizerLateEPCallbacks;
SmallVector<std::function<void(CGSCCPassManager &, OptimizationLevel)>, 2>
CGSCCOptimizerLateEPCallbacks;
SmallVector<std::function<void(FunctionPassManager &, OptimizationLevel)>, 2>
VectorizerStartEPCallbacks;
// Module callbacks
SmallVector<std::function<void(ModulePassManager &)>, 2>
PipelineStartEPCallbacks;
SmallVector<std::function<void(ModuleAnalysisManager &)>, 2>
ModuleAnalysisRegistrationCallbacks;
SmallVector<std::function<bool(StringRef, ModulePassManager &,
ArrayRef<PipelineElement>)>,
2>
ModulePipelineParsingCallbacks;
SmallVector<std::function<bool(ModulePassManager &, ArrayRef<PipelineElement>,
bool VerifyEachPass, bool DebugLogging)>,
2>
TopLevelPipelineParsingCallbacks;
// CGSCC callbacks
SmallVector<std::function<void(CGSCCAnalysisManager &)>, 2>
CGSCCAnalysisRegistrationCallbacks;
SmallVector<std::function<bool(StringRef, CGSCCPassManager &,
ArrayRef<PipelineElement>)>,
2>
CGSCCPipelineParsingCallbacks;
// Function callbacks
SmallVector<std::function<void(FunctionAnalysisManager &)>, 2>
FunctionAnalysisRegistrationCallbacks;
SmallVector<std::function<bool(StringRef, FunctionPassManager &,
ArrayRef<PipelineElement>)>,
2>
FunctionPipelineParsingCallbacks;
// Loop callbacks
SmallVector<std::function<void(LoopAnalysisManager &)>, 2>
LoopAnalysisRegistrationCallbacks;
SmallVector<std::function<bool(StringRef, LoopPassManager &,
ArrayRef<PipelineElement>)>,
2>
LoopPipelineParsingCallbacks;
// AA callbacks
SmallVector<std::function<bool(StringRef Name, AAManager &AA)>, 2>
AAParsingCallbacks;
};
/// This utility template takes care of adding require<> and invalidate<>
/// passes for an analysis to a given \c PassManager. It is intended to be used
/// during parsing of a pass pipeline when parsing a single PipelineName.
/// When registering a new function analysis FancyAnalysis with the pass
/// pipeline name "fancy-analysis", a matching ParsePipelineCallback could look
/// like this:
///
/// static bool parseFunctionPipeline(StringRef Name, FunctionPassManager &FPM,
/// ArrayRef<PipelineElement> P) {
/// if (parseAnalysisUtilityPasses<FancyAnalysis>("fancy-analysis", Name,
/// FPM))
/// return true;
/// return false;
/// }
template <typename AnalysisT, typename IRUnitT, typename AnalysisManagerT,
typename... ExtraArgTs>
bool parseAnalysisUtilityPasses(
StringRef AnalysisName, StringRef PipelineName,
PassManager<IRUnitT, AnalysisManagerT, ExtraArgTs...> &PM) {
if (!PipelineName.endswith(">"))
return false;
// See if this is an invalidate<> pass name
if (PipelineName.startswith("invalidate<")) {
PipelineName = PipelineName.substr(11, PipelineName.size() - 12);
if (PipelineName != AnalysisName)
return false;
PM.addPass(InvalidateAnalysisPass<AnalysisT>());
return true;
}
// See if this is a require<> pass name
if (PipelineName.startswith("require<")) {
PipelineName = PipelineName.substr(8, PipelineName.size() - 9);
if (PipelineName != AnalysisName)
return false;
PM.addPass(RequireAnalysisPass<AnalysisT, IRUnitT, AnalysisManagerT,
ExtraArgTs...>());
return true;
}
return false;
}
}
#endif