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//===- SliceAnalysis.h - Analysis for Transitive UseDef chains --*- C++ -*-===//
//
// 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
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
#ifndef MLIR_ANALYSIS_SLICEANALYSIS_H_
#define MLIR_ANALYSIS_SLICEANALYSIS_H_
#include <functional>
#include <vector>
#include "mlir/Support/LLVM.h"
#include "llvm/ADT/SetVector.h"
namespace mlir {
class Operation;
class Value;
/// Type of the condition to limit the propagation of transitive use-defs.
/// This can be used in particular to limit the propagation to a given Scope or
/// to avoid passing through certain types of operation in a configurable
/// manner.
using TransitiveFilter = llvm::function_ref<bool(Operation *)>;
/// Fills `forwardSlice` with the computed forward slice (i.e. all
/// the transitive uses of op), **without** including that operation.
///
/// This additionally takes a TransitiveFilter which acts as a frontier:
/// when looking at uses transitively, an operation that does not pass the
/// filter is never propagated through. This allows in particular to carve out
/// the scope within a ForOp or the scope within an IfOp.
///
/// The implementation traverses the use chains in postorder traversal for
/// efficiency reasons: if an operation is already in `forwardSlice`, no
/// need to traverse its uses again. Since use-def chains form a DAG, this
/// terminates.
///
/// Upon return to the root call, `forwardSlice` is filled with a
/// postorder list of uses (i.e. a reverse topological order). To get a proper
/// topological order, we just just reverse the order in `forwardSlice` before
/// returning.
///
/// Example starting from node 0
/// ============================
///
/// 0
/// ___________|___________
/// 1 2 3 4
/// |_______| |______|
/// | | |
/// | 5 6
/// |___|_____________|
/// | |
/// 7 8
/// |_______________|
/// |
/// 9
///
/// Assuming all local orders match the numbering order:
/// 1. after getting back to the root getForwardSlice, `forwardSlice` may
/// contain:
/// {9, 7, 8, 5, 1, 2, 6, 3, 4}
/// 2. reversing the result of 1. gives:
/// {4, 3, 6, 2, 1, 5, 8, 7, 9}
///
void getForwardSlice(Operation *op, SetVector<Operation *> *forwardSlice,
TransitiveFilter filter = nullptr /* pass-through*/);
/// Value-rooted version of `getForwardSlice`. Return the union of all forward
/// slices for the uses of the value `root`.
void getForwardSlice(Value root, SetVector<Operation *> *forwardSlice,
TransitiveFilter filter = nullptr /* pass-through*/);
/// Fills `backwardSlice` with the computed backward slice (i.e.
/// all the transitive defs of op), **without** including that operation.
///
/// This additionally takes a TransitiveFilter which acts as a frontier:
/// when looking at defs transitively, an operation that does not pass the
/// filter is never propagated through. This allows in particular to carve out
/// the scope within a ForOp or the scope within an IfOp.
///
/// The implementation traverses the def chains in postorder traversal for
/// efficiency reasons: if an operation is already in `backwardSlice`, no
/// need to traverse its definitions again. Since useuse-def chains form a DAG,
/// this terminates.
///
/// Upon return to the root call, `backwardSlice` is filled with a
/// postorder list of defs. This happens to be a topological order, from the
/// point of view of the use-def chains.
///
/// Example starting from node 8
/// ============================
///
/// 1 2 3 4
/// |_______| |______|
/// | | |
/// | 5 6
/// |___|_____________|
/// | |
/// 7 8
/// |_______________|
/// |
/// 9
///
/// Assuming all local orders match the numbering order:
/// {1, 2, 5, 3, 4, 6}
///
void getBackwardSlice(Operation *op, SetVector<Operation *> *backwardSlice,
TransitiveFilter filter = nullptr /* pass-through*/);
/// Value-rooted version of `getBackwardSlice`. Return the union of all backward
/// slices for the op defining or owning the value `root`.
void getBackwardSlice(Value root, SetVector<Operation *> *backwardSlice,
TransitiveFilter filter = nullptr /* pass-through*/);
/// Iteratively computes backward slices and forward slices until
/// a fixed point is reached. Returns an `SetVector<Operation *>` which
/// **includes** the original operation.
///
/// This allows building a slice (i.e. multi-root DAG where everything
/// that is reachable from an Value in forward and backward direction is
/// contained in the slice).
/// This is the abstraction we need to materialize all the operations for
/// supervectorization without worrying about orderings and Value
/// replacements.
///
/// Example starting from any node
/// ==============================
///
/// 1 2 3 4
/// |_______| |______|
/// | | | |
/// | 5 6___|
/// |___|_____________| |
/// | | |
/// 7 8 |
/// |_______________| |
/// | |
/// 9 10
///
/// Return the whole DAG in some topological order.
///
/// The implementation works by just filling up a worklist with iterative
/// alternate calls to `getBackwardSlice` and `getForwardSlice`.
///
/// The following section describes some additional implementation
/// considerations for a potentially more efficient implementation but they are
/// just an intuition without proof, we still use a worklist for now.
///
/// Additional implementation considerations
/// ========================================
/// Consider the defs-op-uses hourglass.
/// ____
/// \ / defs (in some topological order)
/// \/
/// op
/// /\
/// / \ uses (in some topological order)
/// /____\
///
/// We want to iteratively apply `getSlice` to construct the whole
/// list of Operation that are reachable by (use|def)+ from op.
/// We want the resulting slice in topological order.
/// Ideally we would like the ordering to be maintained in-place to avoid
/// copying Operation at each step. Keeping this ordering by construction
/// seems very unclear, so we list invariants in the hope of seeing whether
/// useful properties pop up.
///
/// In the following:
/// we use |= for set inclusion;
/// we use << for set topological ordering (i.e. each pair is ordered).
///
/// Assumption:
/// ===========
/// We wish to maintain the following property by a recursive argument:
/// """
/// defs << {op} <<uses are in topological order.
/// """
/// The property clearly holds for 0 and 1-sized uses and defs;
///
/// Invariants:
/// 2. defs and uses are in topological order internally, by construction;
/// 3. for any {x} |= defs, defs(x) |= defs; because all go through op
/// 4. for any {x} |= uses, defs |= defs(x); because all go through op
/// 5. for any {x} |= defs, uses |= uses(x); because all go through op
/// 6. for any {x} |= uses, uses(x) |= uses; because all go through op
///
/// Intuitively, we should be able to recurse like:
/// preorder(defs) - op - postorder(uses)
/// and keep things ordered but this is still hand-wavy and not worth the
/// trouble for now: punt to a simple worklist-based solution.
///
SetVector<Operation *>
getSlice(Operation *op,
TransitiveFilter backwardFilter = nullptr /* pass-through*/,
TransitiveFilter forwardFilter = nullptr /* pass-through*/);
/// Multi-root DAG topological sort.
/// Performs a topological sort of the Operation in the `toSort` SetVector.
/// Returns a topologically sorted SetVector.
SetVector<Operation *> topologicalSort(const SetVector<Operation *> &toSort);
} // end namespace mlir
#endif // MLIR_ANALYSIS_SLICEANALYSIS_H_