PR tree-optimization/108447 - Do not try to logical fold floating point relations.
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Commit Message
This boils down to a single place where we are trying to do things with
relations in ranger that are simply not safe when we need to honor NANs.
I think we can avoid all the other shuffling of relations, and simply
not perform this optimization when it comes to floats.
The case the routine handles is:
c_2 = a_6 > b_7
c_3 = a_6 < b_7
c_4 = c_2 && c_3
c_2 and c_3 can never be true at the same time, Therefore c_4 can always
resolve to false based purely on the relations.
Range-ops is unable to do this optimization directly as it requires
examining things from outside the statement, and is not easily
communicated a simple relation to operator_logical_and.
This routine proceeds to look at the definitions of c_2 and c_3, tries
to determine if there are common operands, and queries for any relations
between them. If it turns out there is something, depending on whether
its && or || , we use intersection or union to determine if the result
of the logical operation can be folded. If HONOR_NANS is true for the
float type, then we cannot do this optimization, and bail early.
At this point I do not think we need to do any of the other things
proposed to relations, so we don't need either of the other 2 patches
this release.
Bootstraps on x86_64-pc-linux-gnu with no regressions. OK for trunk?
Andrew
commit 0b080e9579045dd054e9b3289d123d6b66567e3e
Author: Andrew MacLeod <amacleod@redhat.com>
Date: Wed Jan 25 11:13:23 2023 -0500
Do not try to logical fold floating point relations.
relation_fold_and_or looks for relations among common operands feeding
logical ands and ors. With no knowledge of NANs, it should not attempt
to do this with floating point ssa names.
PR tree-optimization/108447
gcc/
* gimple-range-fold.cc (old_using_range::relation_fold_and_or):
Do not attempt to fold HONOR_NAN types.
gcc/testsuite/
* gcc.dg/pr108447.c: New.
Comments
On Wed, Jan 25, 2023 at 7:05 PM Andrew MacLeod <amacleod@redhat.com> wrote:
>
> This boils down to a single place where we are trying to do things with
> relations in ranger that are simply not safe when we need to honor NANs.
>
> I think we can avoid all the other shuffling of relations, and simply
> not perform this optimization when it comes to floats.
>
> The case the routine handles is:
>
> c_2 = a_6 > b_7
> c_3 = a_6 < b_7
> c_4 = c_2 && c_3
>
> c_2 and c_3 can never be true at the same time, Therefore c_4 can always
> resolve to false based purely on the relations.
>
>
> Range-ops is unable to do this optimization directly as it requires
> examining things from outside the statement, and is not easily
> communicated a simple relation to operator_logical_and.
>
> This routine proceeds to look at the definitions of c_2 and c_3, tries
> to determine if there are common operands, and queries for any relations
> between them. If it turns out there is something, depending on whether
> its && or || , we use intersection or union to determine if the result
> of the logical operation can be folded. If HONOR_NANS is true for the
> float type, then we cannot do this optimization, and bail early.
>
> At this point I do not think we need to do any of the other things
> proposed to relations, so we don't need either of the other 2 patches
> this release.
>
> Bootstraps on x86_64-pc-linux-gnu with no regressions. OK for trunk?
+ if (HONOR_NANS (TREE_TYPE (ssa1_dep1)))
+ return;
would that rather be !(range-includes-nan (ssa1_dep1) ||
range-includes-nan (ssa1_dep2) || ..)?
That said, if the other 2 patches fix some latent issues in the new
frange code I'd
rather have them fixed.
Richard.
>
> Andrew
On Thu, Jan 26, 2023 at 8:09 AM Richard Biener
<richard.guenther@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On Wed, Jan 25, 2023 at 7:05 PM Andrew MacLeod <amacleod@redhat.com> wrote:
> >
> > This boils down to a single place where we are trying to do things with
> > relations in ranger that are simply not safe when we need to honor NANs.
> >
> > I think we can avoid all the other shuffling of relations, and simply
> > not perform this optimization when it comes to floats.
> >
> > The case the routine handles is:
> >
> > c_2 = a_6 > b_7
> > c_3 = a_6 < b_7
> > c_4 = c_2 && c_3
> >
> > c_2 and c_3 can never be true at the same time, Therefore c_4 can always
> > resolve to false based purely on the relations.
> >
> >
> > Range-ops is unable to do this optimization directly as it requires
> > examining things from outside the statement, and is not easily
> > communicated a simple relation to operator_logical_and.
> >
> > This routine proceeds to look at the definitions of c_2 and c_3, tries
> > to determine if there are common operands, and queries for any relations
> > between them. If it turns out there is something, depending on whether
> > its && or || , we use intersection or union to determine if the result
> > of the logical operation can be folded. If HONOR_NANS is true for the
> > float type, then we cannot do this optimization, and bail early.
> >
> > At this point I do not think we need to do any of the other things
> > proposed to relations, so we don't need either of the other 2 patches
> > this release.
> >
> > Bootstraps on x86_64-pc-linux-gnu with no regressions. OK for trunk?
>
> + if (HONOR_NANS (TREE_TYPE (ssa1_dep1)))
> + return;
>
> would that rather be !(range-includes-nan (ssa1_dep1) ||
> range-includes-nan (ssa1_dep2) || ..)?
Saw the discussion in the other thread only now, so OK.
> That said, if the other 2 patches fix some latent issues in the new
> frange code I'd
> rather have them fixed.
So do we know bugs in the current code? You said some buggy
function isn't used, so better delete it. Are there other latent issues?
Thanks,
Richard.
> Richard.
>
> >
> > Andrew
On 1/26/23 02:13, Richard Biener wrote:
> On Thu, Jan 26, 2023 at 8:09 AM Richard Biener
> <richard.guenther@gmail.com> wrote:
>> On Wed, Jan 25, 2023 at 7:05 PM Andrew MacLeod <amacleod@redhat.com> wrote:
>>> This boils down to a single place where we are trying to do things with
>>> relations in ranger that are simply not safe when we need to honor NANs.
>>>
>>> I think we can avoid all the other shuffling of relations, and simply
>>> not perform this optimization when it comes to floats.
>>>
>>> The case the routine handles is:
>>>
>>> c_2 = a_6 > b_7
>>> c_3 = a_6 < b_7
>>> c_4 = c_2 && c_3
>>>
>>> c_2 and c_3 can never be true at the same time, Therefore c_4 can always
>>> resolve to false based purely on the relations.
>>>
>>>
>>> Range-ops is unable to do this optimization directly as it requires
>>> examining things from outside the statement, and is not easily
>>> communicated a simple relation to operator_logical_and.
>>>
>>> This routine proceeds to look at the definitions of c_2 and c_3, tries
>>> to determine if there are common operands, and queries for any relations
>>> between them. If it turns out there is something, depending on whether
>>> its && or || , we use intersection or union to determine if the result
>>> of the logical operation can be folded. If HONOR_NANS is true for the
>>> float type, then we cannot do this optimization, and bail early.
>>>
>>> At this point I do not think we need to do any of the other things
>>> proposed to relations, so we don't need either of the other 2 patches
>>> this release.
>>>
>>> Bootstraps on x86_64-pc-linux-gnu with no regressions. OK for trunk?
>> + if (HONOR_NANS (TREE_TYPE (ssa1_dep1)))
>> + return;
>>
>> would that rather be !(range-includes-nan (ssa1_dep1) ||
>> range-includes-nan (ssa1_dep2) || ..)?
> Saw the discussion in the other thread only now, so OK.
>
>> That said, if the other 2 patches fix some latent issues in the new
>> frange code I'd
>> rather have them fixed.
> So do we know bugs in the current code? You said some buggy
> function isn't used, so better delete it. Are there other latent issues?
>
No bugs :-) At leats not related tot hat. Yes, negate turns out to
not currently be used (im sure it will eventually), but without the
VREL_OTHER or other changes to relation representation, the negate table
is currently correct.
Andrew
@@ -1039,6 +1039,9 @@ fold_using_range::relation_fold_and_or (irange& lhs_range, gimple *s,
if (!ssa1_dep1 || !ssa1_dep2 || !ssa2_dep1 || !ssa2_dep2)
return;
+ if (HONOR_NANS (TREE_TYPE (ssa1_dep1)))
+ return;
+
// Make sure they are the same dependencies, and detect the order of the
// relationship.
bool reverse_op2 = true;
new file mode 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,33 @@
+/* { dg-do run } */
+/* { dg-options "-O2" } */
+
+__attribute__((noipa)) int
+foo (float x, float y)
+{
+ _Bool cmp1 = x <= y;
+ _Bool cmp2 = x >= y;
+ if (cmp1 && cmp2)
+ return 1;
+ else if (!cmp1 && !cmp2)
+ return -1;
+ return 0;
+}
+
+int
+main ()
+{
+ if (foo (0.0f, __builtin_nanf ("")) != -1)
+ __builtin_abort ();
+ if (foo (__builtin_nanf (""), -42.0f) != -1)
+ __builtin_abort ();
+ if (foo (0.0f, -0.0f) != 1)
+ __builtin_abort ();
+ if (foo (42.0f, 42.0f) != 1)
+ __builtin_abort ();
+ if (foo (42.0f, -0.0f) != 0)
+ __builtin_abort ();
+ if (foo (0.0f, -42.0f) != 0)
+ __builtin_abort ();
+ return 0;
+}
+