xref: /freebsd/contrib/llvm-project/llvm/lib/Transforms/Scalar/Reassociate.cpp (revision c66ec88fed842fbaad62c30d510644ceb7bd2d71)
1 //===- Reassociate.cpp - Reassociate binary expressions -------------------===//
2 //
3 // Part of the LLVM Project, under the Apache License v2.0 with LLVM Exceptions.
4 // See https://llvm.org/LICENSE.txt for license information.
5 // SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 WITH LLVM-exception
6 //
7 //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
8 //
9 // This pass reassociates commutative expressions in an order that is designed
10 // to promote better constant propagation, GCSE, LICM, PRE, etc.
11 //
12 // For example: 4 + (x + 5) -> x + (4 + 5)
13 //
14 // In the implementation of this algorithm, constants are assigned rank = 0,
15 // function arguments are rank = 1, and other values are assigned ranks
16 // corresponding to the reverse post order traversal of current function
17 // (starting at 2), which effectively gives values in deep loops higher rank
18 // than values not in loops.
19 //
20 //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
21 
22 #include "llvm/Transforms/Scalar/Reassociate.h"
23 #include "llvm/ADT/APFloat.h"
24 #include "llvm/ADT/APInt.h"
25 #include "llvm/ADT/DenseMap.h"
26 #include "llvm/ADT/PostOrderIterator.h"
27 #include "llvm/ADT/SetVector.h"
28 #include "llvm/ADT/SmallPtrSet.h"
29 #include "llvm/ADT/SmallSet.h"
30 #include "llvm/ADT/SmallVector.h"
31 #include "llvm/ADT/Statistic.h"
32 #include "llvm/Analysis/BasicAliasAnalysis.h"
33 #include "llvm/Analysis/GlobalsModRef.h"
34 #include "llvm/Analysis/ValueTracking.h"
35 #include "llvm/IR/Argument.h"
36 #include "llvm/IR/BasicBlock.h"
37 #include "llvm/IR/CFG.h"
38 #include "llvm/IR/Constant.h"
39 #include "llvm/IR/Constants.h"
40 #include "llvm/IR/Function.h"
41 #include "llvm/IR/IRBuilder.h"
42 #include "llvm/IR/InstrTypes.h"
43 #include "llvm/IR/Instruction.h"
44 #include "llvm/IR/Instructions.h"
45 #include "llvm/IR/IntrinsicInst.h"
46 #include "llvm/IR/Operator.h"
47 #include "llvm/IR/PassManager.h"
48 #include "llvm/IR/PatternMatch.h"
49 #include "llvm/IR/Type.h"
50 #include "llvm/IR/User.h"
51 #include "llvm/IR/Value.h"
52 #include "llvm/IR/ValueHandle.h"
53 #include "llvm/InitializePasses.h"
54 #include "llvm/Pass.h"
55 #include "llvm/Support/Casting.h"
56 #include "llvm/Support/Debug.h"
57 #include "llvm/Support/ErrorHandling.h"
58 #include "llvm/Support/raw_ostream.h"
59 #include "llvm/Transforms/Scalar.h"
60 #include "llvm/Transforms/Utils/Local.h"
61 #include <algorithm>
62 #include <cassert>
63 #include <utility>
64 
65 using namespace llvm;
66 using namespace reassociate;
67 using namespace PatternMatch;
68 
69 #define DEBUG_TYPE "reassociate"
70 
71 STATISTIC(NumChanged, "Number of insts reassociated");
72 STATISTIC(NumAnnihil, "Number of expr tree annihilated");
73 STATISTIC(NumFactor , "Number of multiplies factored");
74 
75 #ifndef NDEBUG
76 /// Print out the expression identified in the Ops list.
77 static void PrintOps(Instruction *I, const SmallVectorImpl<ValueEntry> &Ops) {
78   Module *M = I->getModule();
79   dbgs() << Instruction::getOpcodeName(I->getOpcode()) << " "
80        << *Ops[0].Op->getType() << '\t';
81   for (unsigned i = 0, e = Ops.size(); i != e; ++i) {
82     dbgs() << "[ ";
83     Ops[i].Op->printAsOperand(dbgs(), false, M);
84     dbgs() << ", #" << Ops[i].Rank << "] ";
85   }
86 }
87 #endif
88 
89 /// Utility class representing a non-constant Xor-operand. We classify
90 /// non-constant Xor-Operands into two categories:
91 ///  C1) The operand is in the form "X & C", where C is a constant and C != ~0
92 ///  C2)
93 ///    C2.1) The operand is in the form of "X | C", where C is a non-zero
94 ///          constant.
95 ///    C2.2) Any operand E which doesn't fall into C1 and C2.1, we view this
96 ///          operand as "E | 0"
97 class llvm::reassociate::XorOpnd {
98 public:
99   XorOpnd(Value *V);
100 
101   bool isInvalid() const { return SymbolicPart == nullptr; }
102   bool isOrExpr() const { return isOr; }
103   Value *getValue() const { return OrigVal; }
104   Value *getSymbolicPart() const { return SymbolicPart; }
105   unsigned getSymbolicRank() const { return SymbolicRank; }
106   const APInt &getConstPart() const { return ConstPart; }
107 
108   void Invalidate() { SymbolicPart = OrigVal = nullptr; }
109   void setSymbolicRank(unsigned R) { SymbolicRank = R; }
110 
111 private:
112   Value *OrigVal;
113   Value *SymbolicPart;
114   APInt ConstPart;
115   unsigned SymbolicRank;
116   bool isOr;
117 };
118 
119 XorOpnd::XorOpnd(Value *V) {
120   assert(!isa<ConstantInt>(V) && "No ConstantInt");
121   OrigVal = V;
122   Instruction *I = dyn_cast<Instruction>(V);
123   SymbolicRank = 0;
124 
125   if (I && (I->getOpcode() == Instruction::Or ||
126             I->getOpcode() == Instruction::And)) {
127     Value *V0 = I->getOperand(0);
128     Value *V1 = I->getOperand(1);
129     const APInt *C;
130     if (match(V0, m_APInt(C)))
131       std::swap(V0, V1);
132 
133     if (match(V1, m_APInt(C))) {
134       ConstPart = *C;
135       SymbolicPart = V0;
136       isOr = (I->getOpcode() == Instruction::Or);
137       return;
138     }
139   }
140 
141   // view the operand as "V | 0"
142   SymbolicPart = V;
143   ConstPart = APInt::getNullValue(V->getType()->getScalarSizeInBits());
144   isOr = true;
145 }
146 
147 /// Return true if V is an instruction of the specified opcode and if it
148 /// only has one use.
149 static BinaryOperator *isReassociableOp(Value *V, unsigned Opcode) {
150   auto *I = dyn_cast<Instruction>(V);
151   if (I && I->hasOneUse() && I->getOpcode() == Opcode)
152     if (!isa<FPMathOperator>(I) || I->isFast())
153       return cast<BinaryOperator>(I);
154   return nullptr;
155 }
156 
157 static BinaryOperator *isReassociableOp(Value *V, unsigned Opcode1,
158                                         unsigned Opcode2) {
159   auto *I = dyn_cast<Instruction>(V);
160   if (I && I->hasOneUse() &&
161       (I->getOpcode() == Opcode1 || I->getOpcode() == Opcode2))
162     if (!isa<FPMathOperator>(I) || I->isFast())
163       return cast<BinaryOperator>(I);
164   return nullptr;
165 }
166 
167 void ReassociatePass::BuildRankMap(Function &F,
168                                    ReversePostOrderTraversal<Function*> &RPOT) {
169   unsigned Rank = 2;
170 
171   // Assign distinct ranks to function arguments.
172   for (auto &Arg : F.args()) {
173     ValueRankMap[&Arg] = ++Rank;
174     LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << "Calculated Rank[" << Arg.getName() << "] = " << Rank
175                       << "\n");
176   }
177 
178   // Traverse basic blocks in ReversePostOrder.
179   for (BasicBlock *BB : RPOT) {
180     unsigned BBRank = RankMap[BB] = ++Rank << 16;
181 
182     // Walk the basic block, adding precomputed ranks for any instructions that
183     // we cannot move.  This ensures that the ranks for these instructions are
184     // all different in the block.
185     for (Instruction &I : *BB)
186       if (mayBeMemoryDependent(I))
187         ValueRankMap[&I] = ++BBRank;
188   }
189 }
190 
191 unsigned ReassociatePass::getRank(Value *V) {
192   Instruction *I = dyn_cast<Instruction>(V);
193   if (!I) {
194     if (isa<Argument>(V)) return ValueRankMap[V];   // Function argument.
195     return 0;  // Otherwise it's a global or constant, rank 0.
196   }
197 
198   if (unsigned Rank = ValueRankMap[I])
199     return Rank;    // Rank already known?
200 
201   // If this is an expression, return the 1+MAX(rank(LHS), rank(RHS)) so that
202   // we can reassociate expressions for code motion!  Since we do not recurse
203   // for PHI nodes, we cannot have infinite recursion here, because there
204   // cannot be loops in the value graph that do not go through PHI nodes.
205   unsigned Rank = 0, MaxRank = RankMap[I->getParent()];
206   for (unsigned i = 0, e = I->getNumOperands(); i != e && Rank != MaxRank; ++i)
207     Rank = std::max(Rank, getRank(I->getOperand(i)));
208 
209   // If this is a 'not' or 'neg' instruction, do not count it for rank. This
210   // assures us that X and ~X will have the same rank.
211   if (!match(I, m_Not(m_Value())) && !match(I, m_Neg(m_Value())) &&
212       !match(I, m_FNeg(m_Value())))
213     ++Rank;
214 
215   LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << "Calculated Rank[" << V->getName() << "] = " << Rank
216                     << "\n");
217 
218   return ValueRankMap[I] = Rank;
219 }
220 
221 // Canonicalize constants to RHS.  Otherwise, sort the operands by rank.
222 void ReassociatePass::canonicalizeOperands(Instruction *I) {
223   assert(isa<BinaryOperator>(I) && "Expected binary operator.");
224   assert(I->isCommutative() && "Expected commutative operator.");
225 
226   Value *LHS = I->getOperand(0);
227   Value *RHS = I->getOperand(1);
228   if (LHS == RHS || isa<Constant>(RHS))
229     return;
230   if (isa<Constant>(LHS) || getRank(RHS) < getRank(LHS))
231     cast<BinaryOperator>(I)->swapOperands();
232 }
233 
234 static BinaryOperator *CreateAdd(Value *S1, Value *S2, const Twine &Name,
235                                  Instruction *InsertBefore, Value *FlagsOp) {
236   if (S1->getType()->isIntOrIntVectorTy())
237     return BinaryOperator::CreateAdd(S1, S2, Name, InsertBefore);
238   else {
239     BinaryOperator *Res =
240         BinaryOperator::CreateFAdd(S1, S2, Name, InsertBefore);
241     Res->setFastMathFlags(cast<FPMathOperator>(FlagsOp)->getFastMathFlags());
242     return Res;
243   }
244 }
245 
246 static BinaryOperator *CreateMul(Value *S1, Value *S2, const Twine &Name,
247                                  Instruction *InsertBefore, Value *FlagsOp) {
248   if (S1->getType()->isIntOrIntVectorTy())
249     return BinaryOperator::CreateMul(S1, S2, Name, InsertBefore);
250   else {
251     BinaryOperator *Res =
252       BinaryOperator::CreateFMul(S1, S2, Name, InsertBefore);
253     Res->setFastMathFlags(cast<FPMathOperator>(FlagsOp)->getFastMathFlags());
254     return Res;
255   }
256 }
257 
258 static Instruction *CreateNeg(Value *S1, const Twine &Name,
259                               Instruction *InsertBefore, Value *FlagsOp) {
260   if (S1->getType()->isIntOrIntVectorTy())
261     return BinaryOperator::CreateNeg(S1, Name, InsertBefore);
262 
263   if (auto *FMFSource = dyn_cast<Instruction>(FlagsOp))
264     return UnaryOperator::CreateFNegFMF(S1, FMFSource, Name, InsertBefore);
265 
266   return UnaryOperator::CreateFNeg(S1, Name, InsertBefore);
267 }
268 
269 /// Replace 0-X with X*-1.
270 static BinaryOperator *LowerNegateToMultiply(Instruction *Neg) {
271   assert((isa<UnaryOperator>(Neg) || isa<BinaryOperator>(Neg)) &&
272          "Expected a Negate!");
273   // FIXME: It's not safe to lower a unary FNeg into a FMul by -1.0.
274   unsigned OpNo = isa<BinaryOperator>(Neg) ? 1 : 0;
275   Type *Ty = Neg->getType();
276   Constant *NegOne = Ty->isIntOrIntVectorTy() ?
277     ConstantInt::getAllOnesValue(Ty) : ConstantFP::get(Ty, -1.0);
278 
279   BinaryOperator *Res = CreateMul(Neg->getOperand(OpNo), NegOne, "", Neg, Neg);
280   Neg->setOperand(OpNo, Constant::getNullValue(Ty)); // Drop use of op.
281   Res->takeName(Neg);
282   Neg->replaceAllUsesWith(Res);
283   Res->setDebugLoc(Neg->getDebugLoc());
284   return Res;
285 }
286 
287 /// Returns k such that lambda(2^Bitwidth) = 2^k, where lambda is the Carmichael
288 /// function. This means that x^(2^k) === 1 mod 2^Bitwidth for
289 /// every odd x, i.e. x^(2^k) = 1 for every odd x in Bitwidth-bit arithmetic.
290 /// Note that 0 <= k < Bitwidth, and if Bitwidth > 3 then x^(2^k) = 0 for every
291 /// even x in Bitwidth-bit arithmetic.
292 static unsigned CarmichaelShift(unsigned Bitwidth) {
293   if (Bitwidth < 3)
294     return Bitwidth - 1;
295   return Bitwidth - 2;
296 }
297 
298 /// Add the extra weight 'RHS' to the existing weight 'LHS',
299 /// reducing the combined weight using any special properties of the operation.
300 /// The existing weight LHS represents the computation X op X op ... op X where
301 /// X occurs LHS times.  The combined weight represents  X op X op ... op X with
302 /// X occurring LHS + RHS times.  If op is "Xor" for example then the combined
303 /// operation is equivalent to X if LHS + RHS is odd, or 0 if LHS + RHS is even;
304 /// the routine returns 1 in LHS in the first case, and 0 in LHS in the second.
305 static void IncorporateWeight(APInt &LHS, const APInt &RHS, unsigned Opcode) {
306   // If we were working with infinite precision arithmetic then the combined
307   // weight would be LHS + RHS.  But we are using finite precision arithmetic,
308   // and the APInt sum LHS + RHS may not be correct if it wraps (it is correct
309   // for nilpotent operations and addition, but not for idempotent operations
310   // and multiplication), so it is important to correctly reduce the combined
311   // weight back into range if wrapping would be wrong.
312 
313   // If RHS is zero then the weight didn't change.
314   if (RHS.isMinValue())
315     return;
316   // If LHS is zero then the combined weight is RHS.
317   if (LHS.isMinValue()) {
318     LHS = RHS;
319     return;
320   }
321   // From this point on we know that neither LHS nor RHS is zero.
322 
323   if (Instruction::isIdempotent(Opcode)) {
324     // Idempotent means X op X === X, so any non-zero weight is equivalent to a
325     // weight of 1.  Keeping weights at zero or one also means that wrapping is
326     // not a problem.
327     assert(LHS == 1 && RHS == 1 && "Weights not reduced!");
328     return; // Return a weight of 1.
329   }
330   if (Instruction::isNilpotent(Opcode)) {
331     // Nilpotent means X op X === 0, so reduce weights modulo 2.
332     assert(LHS == 1 && RHS == 1 && "Weights not reduced!");
333     LHS = 0; // 1 + 1 === 0 modulo 2.
334     return;
335   }
336   if (Opcode == Instruction::Add || Opcode == Instruction::FAdd) {
337     // TODO: Reduce the weight by exploiting nsw/nuw?
338     LHS += RHS;
339     return;
340   }
341 
342   assert((Opcode == Instruction::Mul || Opcode == Instruction::FMul) &&
343          "Unknown associative operation!");
344   unsigned Bitwidth = LHS.getBitWidth();
345   // If CM is the Carmichael number then a weight W satisfying W >= CM+Bitwidth
346   // can be replaced with W-CM.  That's because x^W=x^(W-CM) for every Bitwidth
347   // bit number x, since either x is odd in which case x^CM = 1, or x is even in
348   // which case both x^W and x^(W - CM) are zero.  By subtracting off multiples
349   // of CM like this weights can always be reduced to the range [0, CM+Bitwidth)
350   // which by a happy accident means that they can always be represented using
351   // Bitwidth bits.
352   // TODO: Reduce the weight by exploiting nsw/nuw?  (Could do much better than
353   // the Carmichael number).
354   if (Bitwidth > 3) {
355     /// CM - The value of Carmichael's lambda function.
356     APInt CM = APInt::getOneBitSet(Bitwidth, CarmichaelShift(Bitwidth));
357     // Any weight W >= Threshold can be replaced with W - CM.
358     APInt Threshold = CM + Bitwidth;
359     assert(LHS.ult(Threshold) && RHS.ult(Threshold) && "Weights not reduced!");
360     // For Bitwidth 4 or more the following sum does not overflow.
361     LHS += RHS;
362     while (LHS.uge(Threshold))
363       LHS -= CM;
364   } else {
365     // To avoid problems with overflow do everything the same as above but using
366     // a larger type.
367     unsigned CM = 1U << CarmichaelShift(Bitwidth);
368     unsigned Threshold = CM + Bitwidth;
369     assert(LHS.getZExtValue() < Threshold && RHS.getZExtValue() < Threshold &&
370            "Weights not reduced!");
371     unsigned Total = LHS.getZExtValue() + RHS.getZExtValue();
372     while (Total >= Threshold)
373       Total -= CM;
374     LHS = Total;
375   }
376 }
377 
378 using RepeatedValue = std::pair<Value*, APInt>;
379 
380 /// Given an associative binary expression, return the leaf
381 /// nodes in Ops along with their weights (how many times the leaf occurs).  The
382 /// original expression is the same as
383 ///   (Ops[0].first op Ops[0].first op ... Ops[0].first)  <- Ops[0].second times
384 /// op
385 ///   (Ops[1].first op Ops[1].first op ... Ops[1].first)  <- Ops[1].second times
386 /// op
387 ///   ...
388 /// op
389 ///   (Ops[N].first op Ops[N].first op ... Ops[N].first)  <- Ops[N].second times
390 ///
391 /// Note that the values Ops[0].first, ..., Ops[N].first are all distinct.
392 ///
393 /// This routine may modify the function, in which case it returns 'true'.  The
394 /// changes it makes may well be destructive, changing the value computed by 'I'
395 /// to something completely different.  Thus if the routine returns 'true' then
396 /// you MUST either replace I with a new expression computed from the Ops array,
397 /// or use RewriteExprTree to put the values back in.
398 ///
399 /// A leaf node is either not a binary operation of the same kind as the root
400 /// node 'I' (i.e. is not a binary operator at all, or is, but with a different
401 /// opcode), or is the same kind of binary operator but has a use which either
402 /// does not belong to the expression, or does belong to the expression but is
403 /// a leaf node.  Every leaf node has at least one use that is a non-leaf node
404 /// of the expression, while for non-leaf nodes (except for the root 'I') every
405 /// use is a non-leaf node of the expression.
406 ///
407 /// For example:
408 ///           expression graph        node names
409 ///
410 ///                     +        |        I
411 ///                    / \       |
412 ///                   +   +      |      A,  B
413 ///                  / \ / \     |
414 ///                 *   +   *    |    C,  D,  E
415 ///                / \ / \ / \   |
416 ///                   +   *      |      F,  G
417 ///
418 /// The leaf nodes are C, E, F and G.  The Ops array will contain (maybe not in
419 /// that order) (C, 1), (E, 1), (F, 2), (G, 2).
420 ///
421 /// The expression is maximal: if some instruction is a binary operator of the
422 /// same kind as 'I', and all of its uses are non-leaf nodes of the expression,
423 /// then the instruction also belongs to the expression, is not a leaf node of
424 /// it, and its operands also belong to the expression (but may be leaf nodes).
425 ///
426 /// NOTE: This routine will set operands of non-leaf non-root nodes to undef in
427 /// order to ensure that every non-root node in the expression has *exactly one*
428 /// use by a non-leaf node of the expression.  This destruction means that the
429 /// caller MUST either replace 'I' with a new expression or use something like
430 /// RewriteExprTree to put the values back in if the routine indicates that it
431 /// made a change by returning 'true'.
432 ///
433 /// In the above example either the right operand of A or the left operand of B
434 /// will be replaced by undef.  If it is B's operand then this gives:
435 ///
436 ///                     +        |        I
437 ///                    / \       |
438 ///                   +   +      |      A,  B - operand of B replaced with undef
439 ///                  / \   \     |
440 ///                 *   +   *    |    C,  D,  E
441 ///                / \ / \ / \   |
442 ///                   +   *      |      F,  G
443 ///
444 /// Note that such undef operands can only be reached by passing through 'I'.
445 /// For example, if you visit operands recursively starting from a leaf node
446 /// then you will never see such an undef operand unless you get back to 'I',
447 /// which requires passing through a phi node.
448 ///
449 /// Note that this routine may also mutate binary operators of the wrong type
450 /// that have all uses inside the expression (i.e. only used by non-leaf nodes
451 /// of the expression) if it can turn them into binary operators of the right
452 /// type and thus make the expression bigger.
453 static bool LinearizeExprTree(Instruction *I,
454                               SmallVectorImpl<RepeatedValue> &Ops) {
455   assert((isa<UnaryOperator>(I) || isa<BinaryOperator>(I)) &&
456          "Expected a UnaryOperator or BinaryOperator!");
457   LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << "LINEARIZE: " << *I << '\n');
458   unsigned Bitwidth = I->getType()->getScalarType()->getPrimitiveSizeInBits();
459   unsigned Opcode = I->getOpcode();
460   assert(I->isAssociative() && I->isCommutative() &&
461          "Expected an associative and commutative operation!");
462 
463   // Visit all operands of the expression, keeping track of their weight (the
464   // number of paths from the expression root to the operand, or if you like
465   // the number of times that operand occurs in the linearized expression).
466   // For example, if I = X + A, where X = A + B, then I, X and B have weight 1
467   // while A has weight two.
468 
469   // Worklist of non-leaf nodes (their operands are in the expression too) along
470   // with their weights, representing a certain number of paths to the operator.
471   // If an operator occurs in the worklist multiple times then we found multiple
472   // ways to get to it.
473   SmallVector<std::pair<Instruction*, APInt>, 8> Worklist; // (Op, Weight)
474   Worklist.push_back(std::make_pair(I, APInt(Bitwidth, 1)));
475   bool Changed = false;
476 
477   // Leaves of the expression are values that either aren't the right kind of
478   // operation (eg: a constant, or a multiply in an add tree), or are, but have
479   // some uses that are not inside the expression.  For example, in I = X + X,
480   // X = A + B, the value X has two uses (by I) that are in the expression.  If
481   // X has any other uses, for example in a return instruction, then we consider
482   // X to be a leaf, and won't analyze it further.  When we first visit a value,
483   // if it has more than one use then at first we conservatively consider it to
484   // be a leaf.  Later, as the expression is explored, we may discover some more
485   // uses of the value from inside the expression.  If all uses turn out to be
486   // from within the expression (and the value is a binary operator of the right
487   // kind) then the value is no longer considered to be a leaf, and its operands
488   // are explored.
489 
490   // Leaves - Keeps track of the set of putative leaves as well as the number of
491   // paths to each leaf seen so far.
492   using LeafMap = DenseMap<Value *, APInt>;
493   LeafMap Leaves; // Leaf -> Total weight so far.
494   SmallVector<Value *, 8> LeafOrder; // Ensure deterministic leaf output order.
495 
496 #ifndef NDEBUG
497   SmallPtrSet<Value *, 8> Visited; // For sanity checking the iteration scheme.
498 #endif
499   while (!Worklist.empty()) {
500     std::pair<Instruction*, APInt> P = Worklist.pop_back_val();
501     I = P.first; // We examine the operands of this binary operator.
502 
503     for (unsigned OpIdx = 0; OpIdx < I->getNumOperands(); ++OpIdx) { // Visit operands.
504       Value *Op = I->getOperand(OpIdx);
505       APInt Weight = P.second; // Number of paths to this operand.
506       LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << "OPERAND: " << *Op << " (" << Weight << ")\n");
507       assert(!Op->use_empty() && "No uses, so how did we get to it?!");
508 
509       // If this is a binary operation of the right kind with only one use then
510       // add its operands to the expression.
511       if (BinaryOperator *BO = isReassociableOp(Op, Opcode)) {
512         assert(Visited.insert(Op).second && "Not first visit!");
513         LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << "DIRECT ADD: " << *Op << " (" << Weight << ")\n");
514         Worklist.push_back(std::make_pair(BO, Weight));
515         continue;
516       }
517 
518       // Appears to be a leaf.  Is the operand already in the set of leaves?
519       LeafMap::iterator It = Leaves.find(Op);
520       if (It == Leaves.end()) {
521         // Not in the leaf map.  Must be the first time we saw this operand.
522         assert(Visited.insert(Op).second && "Not first visit!");
523         if (!Op->hasOneUse()) {
524           // This value has uses not accounted for by the expression, so it is
525           // not safe to modify.  Mark it as being a leaf.
526           LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs()
527                      << "ADD USES LEAF: " << *Op << " (" << Weight << ")\n");
528           LeafOrder.push_back(Op);
529           Leaves[Op] = Weight;
530           continue;
531         }
532         // No uses outside the expression, try morphing it.
533       } else {
534         // Already in the leaf map.
535         assert(It != Leaves.end() && Visited.count(Op) &&
536                "In leaf map but not visited!");
537 
538         // Update the number of paths to the leaf.
539         IncorporateWeight(It->second, Weight, Opcode);
540 
541 #if 0   // TODO: Re-enable once PR13021 is fixed.
542         // The leaf already has one use from inside the expression.  As we want
543         // exactly one such use, drop this new use of the leaf.
544         assert(!Op->hasOneUse() && "Only one use, but we got here twice!");
545         I->setOperand(OpIdx, UndefValue::get(I->getType()));
546         Changed = true;
547 
548         // If the leaf is a binary operation of the right kind and we now see
549         // that its multiple original uses were in fact all by nodes belonging
550         // to the expression, then no longer consider it to be a leaf and add
551         // its operands to the expression.
552         if (BinaryOperator *BO = isReassociableOp(Op, Opcode)) {
553           LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << "UNLEAF: " << *Op << " (" << It->second << ")\n");
554           Worklist.push_back(std::make_pair(BO, It->second));
555           Leaves.erase(It);
556           continue;
557         }
558 #endif
559 
560         // If we still have uses that are not accounted for by the expression
561         // then it is not safe to modify the value.
562         if (!Op->hasOneUse())
563           continue;
564 
565         // No uses outside the expression, try morphing it.
566         Weight = It->second;
567         Leaves.erase(It); // Since the value may be morphed below.
568       }
569 
570       // At this point we have a value which, first of all, is not a binary
571       // expression of the right kind, and secondly, is only used inside the
572       // expression.  This means that it can safely be modified.  See if we
573       // can usefully morph it into an expression of the right kind.
574       assert((!isa<Instruction>(Op) ||
575               cast<Instruction>(Op)->getOpcode() != Opcode
576               || (isa<FPMathOperator>(Op) &&
577                   !cast<Instruction>(Op)->isFast())) &&
578              "Should have been handled above!");
579       assert(Op->hasOneUse() && "Has uses outside the expression tree!");
580 
581       // If this is a multiply expression, turn any internal negations into
582       // multiplies by -1 so they can be reassociated.
583       if (Instruction *Tmp = dyn_cast<Instruction>(Op))
584         if ((Opcode == Instruction::Mul && match(Tmp, m_Neg(m_Value()))) ||
585             (Opcode == Instruction::FMul && match(Tmp, m_FNeg(m_Value())))) {
586           LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs()
587                      << "MORPH LEAF: " << *Op << " (" << Weight << ") TO ");
588           Tmp = LowerNegateToMultiply(Tmp);
589           LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << *Tmp << '\n');
590           Worklist.push_back(std::make_pair(Tmp, Weight));
591           Changed = true;
592           continue;
593         }
594 
595       // Failed to morph into an expression of the right type.  This really is
596       // a leaf.
597       LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << "ADD LEAF: " << *Op << " (" << Weight << ")\n");
598       assert(!isReassociableOp(Op, Opcode) && "Value was morphed?");
599       LeafOrder.push_back(Op);
600       Leaves[Op] = Weight;
601     }
602   }
603 
604   // The leaves, repeated according to their weights, represent the linearized
605   // form of the expression.
606   for (unsigned i = 0, e = LeafOrder.size(); i != e; ++i) {
607     Value *V = LeafOrder[i];
608     LeafMap::iterator It = Leaves.find(V);
609     if (It == Leaves.end())
610       // Node initially thought to be a leaf wasn't.
611       continue;
612     assert(!isReassociableOp(V, Opcode) && "Shouldn't be a leaf!");
613     APInt Weight = It->second;
614     if (Weight.isMinValue())
615       // Leaf already output or weight reduction eliminated it.
616       continue;
617     // Ensure the leaf is only output once.
618     It->second = 0;
619     Ops.push_back(std::make_pair(V, Weight));
620   }
621 
622   // For nilpotent operations or addition there may be no operands, for example
623   // because the expression was "X xor X" or consisted of 2^Bitwidth additions:
624   // in both cases the weight reduces to 0 causing the value to be skipped.
625   if (Ops.empty()) {
626     Constant *Identity = ConstantExpr::getBinOpIdentity(Opcode, I->getType());
627     assert(Identity && "Associative operation without identity!");
628     Ops.emplace_back(Identity, APInt(Bitwidth, 1));
629   }
630 
631   return Changed;
632 }
633 
634 /// Now that the operands for this expression tree are
635 /// linearized and optimized, emit them in-order.
636 void ReassociatePass::RewriteExprTree(BinaryOperator *I,
637                                       SmallVectorImpl<ValueEntry> &Ops) {
638   assert(Ops.size() > 1 && "Single values should be used directly!");
639 
640   // Since our optimizations should never increase the number of operations, the
641   // new expression can usually be written reusing the existing binary operators
642   // from the original expression tree, without creating any new instructions,
643   // though the rewritten expression may have a completely different topology.
644   // We take care to not change anything if the new expression will be the same
645   // as the original.  If more than trivial changes (like commuting operands)
646   // were made then we are obliged to clear out any optional subclass data like
647   // nsw flags.
648 
649   /// NodesToRewrite - Nodes from the original expression available for writing
650   /// the new expression into.
651   SmallVector<BinaryOperator*, 8> NodesToRewrite;
652   unsigned Opcode = I->getOpcode();
653   BinaryOperator *Op = I;
654 
655   /// NotRewritable - The operands being written will be the leaves of the new
656   /// expression and must not be used as inner nodes (via NodesToRewrite) by
657   /// mistake.  Inner nodes are always reassociable, and usually leaves are not
658   /// (if they were they would have been incorporated into the expression and so
659   /// would not be leaves), so most of the time there is no danger of this.  But
660   /// in rare cases a leaf may become reassociable if an optimization kills uses
661   /// of it, or it may momentarily become reassociable during rewriting (below)
662   /// due it being removed as an operand of one of its uses.  Ensure that misuse
663   /// of leaf nodes as inner nodes cannot occur by remembering all of the future
664   /// leaves and refusing to reuse any of them as inner nodes.
665   SmallPtrSet<Value*, 8> NotRewritable;
666   for (unsigned i = 0, e = Ops.size(); i != e; ++i)
667     NotRewritable.insert(Ops[i].Op);
668 
669   // ExpressionChanged - Non-null if the rewritten expression differs from the
670   // original in some non-trivial way, requiring the clearing of optional flags.
671   // Flags are cleared from the operator in ExpressionChanged up to I inclusive.
672   BinaryOperator *ExpressionChanged = nullptr;
673   for (unsigned i = 0; ; ++i) {
674     // The last operation (which comes earliest in the IR) is special as both
675     // operands will come from Ops, rather than just one with the other being
676     // a subexpression.
677     if (i+2 == Ops.size()) {
678       Value *NewLHS = Ops[i].Op;
679       Value *NewRHS = Ops[i+1].Op;
680       Value *OldLHS = Op->getOperand(0);
681       Value *OldRHS = Op->getOperand(1);
682 
683       if (NewLHS == OldLHS && NewRHS == OldRHS)
684         // Nothing changed, leave it alone.
685         break;
686 
687       if (NewLHS == OldRHS && NewRHS == OldLHS) {
688         // The order of the operands was reversed.  Swap them.
689         LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << "RA: " << *Op << '\n');
690         Op->swapOperands();
691         LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << "TO: " << *Op << '\n');
692         MadeChange = true;
693         ++NumChanged;
694         break;
695       }
696 
697       // The new operation differs non-trivially from the original. Overwrite
698       // the old operands with the new ones.
699       LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << "RA: " << *Op << '\n');
700       if (NewLHS != OldLHS) {
701         BinaryOperator *BO = isReassociableOp(OldLHS, Opcode);
702         if (BO && !NotRewritable.count(BO))
703           NodesToRewrite.push_back(BO);
704         Op->setOperand(0, NewLHS);
705       }
706       if (NewRHS != OldRHS) {
707         BinaryOperator *BO = isReassociableOp(OldRHS, Opcode);
708         if (BO && !NotRewritable.count(BO))
709           NodesToRewrite.push_back(BO);
710         Op->setOperand(1, NewRHS);
711       }
712       LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << "TO: " << *Op << '\n');
713 
714       ExpressionChanged = Op;
715       MadeChange = true;
716       ++NumChanged;
717 
718       break;
719     }
720 
721     // Not the last operation.  The left-hand side will be a sub-expression
722     // while the right-hand side will be the current element of Ops.
723     Value *NewRHS = Ops[i].Op;
724     if (NewRHS != Op->getOperand(1)) {
725       LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << "RA: " << *Op << '\n');
726       if (NewRHS == Op->getOperand(0)) {
727         // The new right-hand side was already present as the left operand.  If
728         // we are lucky then swapping the operands will sort out both of them.
729         Op->swapOperands();
730       } else {
731         // Overwrite with the new right-hand side.
732         BinaryOperator *BO = isReassociableOp(Op->getOperand(1), Opcode);
733         if (BO && !NotRewritable.count(BO))
734           NodesToRewrite.push_back(BO);
735         Op->setOperand(1, NewRHS);
736         ExpressionChanged = Op;
737       }
738       LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << "TO: " << *Op << '\n');
739       MadeChange = true;
740       ++NumChanged;
741     }
742 
743     // Now deal with the left-hand side.  If this is already an operation node
744     // from the original expression then just rewrite the rest of the expression
745     // into it.
746     BinaryOperator *BO = isReassociableOp(Op->getOperand(0), Opcode);
747     if (BO && !NotRewritable.count(BO)) {
748       Op = BO;
749       continue;
750     }
751 
752     // Otherwise, grab a spare node from the original expression and use that as
753     // the left-hand side.  If there are no nodes left then the optimizers made
754     // an expression with more nodes than the original!  This usually means that
755     // they did something stupid but it might mean that the problem was just too
756     // hard (finding the mimimal number of multiplications needed to realize a
757     // multiplication expression is NP-complete).  Whatever the reason, smart or
758     // stupid, create a new node if there are none left.
759     BinaryOperator *NewOp;
760     if (NodesToRewrite.empty()) {
761       Constant *Undef = UndefValue::get(I->getType());
762       NewOp = BinaryOperator::Create(Instruction::BinaryOps(Opcode),
763                                      Undef, Undef, "", I);
764       if (NewOp->getType()->isFPOrFPVectorTy())
765         NewOp->setFastMathFlags(I->getFastMathFlags());
766     } else {
767       NewOp = NodesToRewrite.pop_back_val();
768     }
769 
770     LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << "RA: " << *Op << '\n');
771     Op->setOperand(0, NewOp);
772     LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << "TO: " << *Op << '\n');
773     ExpressionChanged = Op;
774     MadeChange = true;
775     ++NumChanged;
776     Op = NewOp;
777   }
778 
779   // If the expression changed non-trivially then clear out all subclass data
780   // starting from the operator specified in ExpressionChanged, and compactify
781   // the operators to just before the expression root to guarantee that the
782   // expression tree is dominated by all of Ops.
783   if (ExpressionChanged)
784     do {
785       // Preserve FastMathFlags.
786       if (isa<FPMathOperator>(I)) {
787         FastMathFlags Flags = I->getFastMathFlags();
788         ExpressionChanged->clearSubclassOptionalData();
789         ExpressionChanged->setFastMathFlags(Flags);
790       } else
791         ExpressionChanged->clearSubclassOptionalData();
792 
793       if (ExpressionChanged == I)
794         break;
795 
796       // Discard any debug info related to the expressions that has changed (we
797       // can leave debug infor related to the root, since the result of the
798       // expression tree should be the same even after reassociation).
799       replaceDbgUsesWithUndef(ExpressionChanged);
800 
801       ExpressionChanged->moveBefore(I);
802       ExpressionChanged = cast<BinaryOperator>(*ExpressionChanged->user_begin());
803     } while (true);
804 
805   // Throw away any left over nodes from the original expression.
806   for (unsigned i = 0, e = NodesToRewrite.size(); i != e; ++i)
807     RedoInsts.insert(NodesToRewrite[i]);
808 }
809 
810 /// Insert instructions before the instruction pointed to by BI,
811 /// that computes the negative version of the value specified.  The negative
812 /// version of the value is returned, and BI is left pointing at the instruction
813 /// that should be processed next by the reassociation pass.
814 /// Also add intermediate instructions to the redo list that are modified while
815 /// pushing the negates through adds.  These will be revisited to see if
816 /// additional opportunities have been exposed.
817 static Value *NegateValue(Value *V, Instruction *BI,
818                           ReassociatePass::OrderedSet &ToRedo) {
819   if (auto *C = dyn_cast<Constant>(V))
820     return C->getType()->isFPOrFPVectorTy() ? ConstantExpr::getFNeg(C) :
821                                               ConstantExpr::getNeg(C);
822 
823   // We are trying to expose opportunity for reassociation.  One of the things
824   // that we want to do to achieve this is to push a negation as deep into an
825   // expression chain as possible, to expose the add instructions.  In practice,
826   // this means that we turn this:
827   //   X = -(A+12+C+D)   into    X = -A + -12 + -C + -D = -12 + -A + -C + -D
828   // so that later, a: Y = 12+X could get reassociated with the -12 to eliminate
829   // the constants.  We assume that instcombine will clean up the mess later if
830   // we introduce tons of unnecessary negation instructions.
831   //
832   if (BinaryOperator *I =
833           isReassociableOp(V, Instruction::Add, Instruction::FAdd)) {
834     // Push the negates through the add.
835     I->setOperand(0, NegateValue(I->getOperand(0), BI, ToRedo));
836     I->setOperand(1, NegateValue(I->getOperand(1), BI, ToRedo));
837     if (I->getOpcode() == Instruction::Add) {
838       I->setHasNoUnsignedWrap(false);
839       I->setHasNoSignedWrap(false);
840     }
841 
842     // We must move the add instruction here, because the neg instructions do
843     // not dominate the old add instruction in general.  By moving it, we are
844     // assured that the neg instructions we just inserted dominate the
845     // instruction we are about to insert after them.
846     //
847     I->moveBefore(BI);
848     I->setName(I->getName()+".neg");
849 
850     // Add the intermediate negates to the redo list as processing them later
851     // could expose more reassociating opportunities.
852     ToRedo.insert(I);
853     return I;
854   }
855 
856   // Okay, we need to materialize a negated version of V with an instruction.
857   // Scan the use lists of V to see if we have one already.
858   for (User *U : V->users()) {
859     if (!match(U, m_Neg(m_Value())) && !match(U, m_FNeg(m_Value())))
860       continue;
861 
862     // We found one!  Now we have to make sure that the definition dominates
863     // this use.  We do this by moving it to the entry block (if it is a
864     // non-instruction value) or right after the definition.  These negates will
865     // be zapped by reassociate later, so we don't need much finesse here.
866     Instruction *TheNeg = cast<Instruction>(U);
867 
868     // Verify that the negate is in this function, V might be a constant expr.
869     if (TheNeg->getParent()->getParent() != BI->getParent()->getParent())
870       continue;
871 
872     bool FoundCatchSwitch = false;
873 
874     BasicBlock::iterator InsertPt;
875     if (Instruction *InstInput = dyn_cast<Instruction>(V)) {
876       if (InvokeInst *II = dyn_cast<InvokeInst>(InstInput)) {
877         InsertPt = II->getNormalDest()->begin();
878       } else {
879         InsertPt = ++InstInput->getIterator();
880       }
881 
882       const BasicBlock *BB = InsertPt->getParent();
883 
884       // Make sure we don't move anything before PHIs or exception
885       // handling pads.
886       while (InsertPt != BB->end() && (isa<PHINode>(InsertPt) ||
887                                        InsertPt->isEHPad())) {
888         if (isa<CatchSwitchInst>(InsertPt))
889           // A catchswitch cannot have anything in the block except
890           // itself and PHIs.  We'll bail out below.
891           FoundCatchSwitch = true;
892         ++InsertPt;
893       }
894     } else {
895       InsertPt = TheNeg->getParent()->getParent()->getEntryBlock().begin();
896     }
897 
898     // We found a catchswitch in the block where we want to move the
899     // neg.  We cannot move anything into that block.  Bail and just
900     // create the neg before BI, as if we hadn't found an existing
901     // neg.
902     if (FoundCatchSwitch)
903       break;
904 
905     TheNeg->moveBefore(&*InsertPt);
906     if (TheNeg->getOpcode() == Instruction::Sub) {
907       TheNeg->setHasNoUnsignedWrap(false);
908       TheNeg->setHasNoSignedWrap(false);
909     } else {
910       TheNeg->andIRFlags(BI);
911     }
912     ToRedo.insert(TheNeg);
913     return TheNeg;
914   }
915 
916   // Insert a 'neg' instruction that subtracts the value from zero to get the
917   // negation.
918   Instruction *NewNeg = CreateNeg(V, V->getName() + ".neg", BI, BI);
919   ToRedo.insert(NewNeg);
920   return NewNeg;
921 }
922 
923 /// Return true if we should break up this subtract of X-Y into (X + -Y).
924 static bool ShouldBreakUpSubtract(Instruction *Sub) {
925   // If this is a negation, we can't split it up!
926   if (match(Sub, m_Neg(m_Value())) || match(Sub, m_FNeg(m_Value())))
927     return false;
928 
929   // Don't breakup X - undef.
930   if (isa<UndefValue>(Sub->getOperand(1)))
931     return false;
932 
933   // Don't bother to break this up unless either the LHS is an associable add or
934   // subtract or if this is only used by one.
935   Value *V0 = Sub->getOperand(0);
936   if (isReassociableOp(V0, Instruction::Add, Instruction::FAdd) ||
937       isReassociableOp(V0, Instruction::Sub, Instruction::FSub))
938     return true;
939   Value *V1 = Sub->getOperand(1);
940   if (isReassociableOp(V1, Instruction::Add, Instruction::FAdd) ||
941       isReassociableOp(V1, Instruction::Sub, Instruction::FSub))
942     return true;
943   Value *VB = Sub->user_back();
944   if (Sub->hasOneUse() &&
945       (isReassociableOp(VB, Instruction::Add, Instruction::FAdd) ||
946        isReassociableOp(VB, Instruction::Sub, Instruction::FSub)))
947     return true;
948 
949   return false;
950 }
951 
952 /// If we have (X-Y), and if either X is an add, or if this is only used by an
953 /// add, transform this into (X+(0-Y)) to promote better reassociation.
954 static BinaryOperator *BreakUpSubtract(Instruction *Sub,
955                                        ReassociatePass::OrderedSet &ToRedo) {
956   // Convert a subtract into an add and a neg instruction. This allows sub
957   // instructions to be commuted with other add instructions.
958   //
959   // Calculate the negative value of Operand 1 of the sub instruction,
960   // and set it as the RHS of the add instruction we just made.
961   Value *NegVal = NegateValue(Sub->getOperand(1), Sub, ToRedo);
962   BinaryOperator *New = CreateAdd(Sub->getOperand(0), NegVal, "", Sub, Sub);
963   Sub->setOperand(0, Constant::getNullValue(Sub->getType())); // Drop use of op.
964   Sub->setOperand(1, Constant::getNullValue(Sub->getType())); // Drop use of op.
965   New->takeName(Sub);
966 
967   // Everyone now refers to the add instruction.
968   Sub->replaceAllUsesWith(New);
969   New->setDebugLoc(Sub->getDebugLoc());
970 
971   LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << "Negated: " << *New << '\n');
972   return New;
973 }
974 
975 /// If this is a shift of a reassociable multiply or is used by one, change
976 /// this into a multiply by a constant to assist with further reassociation.
977 static BinaryOperator *ConvertShiftToMul(Instruction *Shl) {
978   Constant *MulCst = ConstantInt::get(Shl->getType(), 1);
979   auto *SA = cast<ConstantInt>(Shl->getOperand(1));
980   MulCst = ConstantExpr::getShl(MulCst, SA);
981 
982   BinaryOperator *Mul =
983     BinaryOperator::CreateMul(Shl->getOperand(0), MulCst, "", Shl);
984   Shl->setOperand(0, UndefValue::get(Shl->getType())); // Drop use of op.
985   Mul->takeName(Shl);
986 
987   // Everyone now refers to the mul instruction.
988   Shl->replaceAllUsesWith(Mul);
989   Mul->setDebugLoc(Shl->getDebugLoc());
990 
991   // We can safely preserve the nuw flag in all cases.  It's also safe to turn a
992   // nuw nsw shl into a nuw nsw mul.  However, nsw in isolation requires special
993   // handling.  It can be preserved as long as we're not left shifting by
994   // bitwidth - 1.
995   bool NSW = cast<BinaryOperator>(Shl)->hasNoSignedWrap();
996   bool NUW = cast<BinaryOperator>(Shl)->hasNoUnsignedWrap();
997   unsigned BitWidth = Shl->getType()->getIntegerBitWidth();
998   if (NSW && (NUW || SA->getValue().ult(BitWidth - 1)))
999     Mul->setHasNoSignedWrap(true);
1000   Mul->setHasNoUnsignedWrap(NUW);
1001   return Mul;
1002 }
1003 
1004 /// Scan backwards and forwards among values with the same rank as element i
1005 /// to see if X exists.  If X does not exist, return i.  This is useful when
1006 /// scanning for 'x' when we see '-x' because they both get the same rank.
1007 static unsigned FindInOperandList(const SmallVectorImpl<ValueEntry> &Ops,
1008                                   unsigned i, Value *X) {
1009   unsigned XRank = Ops[i].Rank;
1010   unsigned e = Ops.size();
1011   for (unsigned j = i+1; j != e && Ops[j].Rank == XRank; ++j) {
1012     if (Ops[j].Op == X)
1013       return j;
1014     if (Instruction *I1 = dyn_cast<Instruction>(Ops[j].Op))
1015       if (Instruction *I2 = dyn_cast<Instruction>(X))
1016         if (I1->isIdenticalTo(I2))
1017           return j;
1018   }
1019   // Scan backwards.
1020   for (unsigned j = i-1; j != ~0U && Ops[j].Rank == XRank; --j) {
1021     if (Ops[j].Op == X)
1022       return j;
1023     if (Instruction *I1 = dyn_cast<Instruction>(Ops[j].Op))
1024       if (Instruction *I2 = dyn_cast<Instruction>(X))
1025         if (I1->isIdenticalTo(I2))
1026           return j;
1027   }
1028   return i;
1029 }
1030 
1031 /// Emit a tree of add instructions, summing Ops together
1032 /// and returning the result.  Insert the tree before I.
1033 static Value *EmitAddTreeOfValues(Instruction *I,
1034                                   SmallVectorImpl<WeakTrackingVH> &Ops) {
1035   if (Ops.size() == 1) return Ops.back();
1036 
1037   Value *V1 = Ops.back();
1038   Ops.pop_back();
1039   Value *V2 = EmitAddTreeOfValues(I, Ops);
1040   return CreateAdd(V2, V1, "reass.add", I, I);
1041 }
1042 
1043 /// If V is an expression tree that is a multiplication sequence,
1044 /// and if this sequence contains a multiply by Factor,
1045 /// remove Factor from the tree and return the new tree.
1046 Value *ReassociatePass::RemoveFactorFromExpression(Value *V, Value *Factor) {
1047   BinaryOperator *BO = isReassociableOp(V, Instruction::Mul, Instruction::FMul);
1048   if (!BO)
1049     return nullptr;
1050 
1051   SmallVector<RepeatedValue, 8> Tree;
1052   MadeChange |= LinearizeExprTree(BO, Tree);
1053   SmallVector<ValueEntry, 8> Factors;
1054   Factors.reserve(Tree.size());
1055   for (unsigned i = 0, e = Tree.size(); i != e; ++i) {
1056     RepeatedValue E = Tree[i];
1057     Factors.append(E.second.getZExtValue(),
1058                    ValueEntry(getRank(E.first), E.first));
1059   }
1060 
1061   bool FoundFactor = false;
1062   bool NeedsNegate = false;
1063   for (unsigned i = 0, e = Factors.size(); i != e; ++i) {
1064     if (Factors[i].Op == Factor) {
1065       FoundFactor = true;
1066       Factors.erase(Factors.begin()+i);
1067       break;
1068     }
1069 
1070     // If this is a negative version of this factor, remove it.
1071     if (ConstantInt *FC1 = dyn_cast<ConstantInt>(Factor)) {
1072       if (ConstantInt *FC2 = dyn_cast<ConstantInt>(Factors[i].Op))
1073         if (FC1->getValue() == -FC2->getValue()) {
1074           FoundFactor = NeedsNegate = true;
1075           Factors.erase(Factors.begin()+i);
1076           break;
1077         }
1078     } else if (ConstantFP *FC1 = dyn_cast<ConstantFP>(Factor)) {
1079       if (ConstantFP *FC2 = dyn_cast<ConstantFP>(Factors[i].Op)) {
1080         const APFloat &F1 = FC1->getValueAPF();
1081         APFloat F2(FC2->getValueAPF());
1082         F2.changeSign();
1083         if (F1 == F2) {
1084           FoundFactor = NeedsNegate = true;
1085           Factors.erase(Factors.begin() + i);
1086           break;
1087         }
1088       }
1089     }
1090   }
1091 
1092   if (!FoundFactor) {
1093     // Make sure to restore the operands to the expression tree.
1094     RewriteExprTree(BO, Factors);
1095     return nullptr;
1096   }
1097 
1098   BasicBlock::iterator InsertPt = ++BO->getIterator();
1099 
1100   // If this was just a single multiply, remove the multiply and return the only
1101   // remaining operand.
1102   if (Factors.size() == 1) {
1103     RedoInsts.insert(BO);
1104     V = Factors[0].Op;
1105   } else {
1106     RewriteExprTree(BO, Factors);
1107     V = BO;
1108   }
1109 
1110   if (NeedsNegate)
1111     V = CreateNeg(V, "neg", &*InsertPt, BO);
1112 
1113   return V;
1114 }
1115 
1116 /// If V is a single-use multiply, recursively add its operands as factors,
1117 /// otherwise add V to the list of factors.
1118 ///
1119 /// Ops is the top-level list of add operands we're trying to factor.
1120 static void FindSingleUseMultiplyFactors(Value *V,
1121                                          SmallVectorImpl<Value*> &Factors) {
1122   BinaryOperator *BO = isReassociableOp(V, Instruction::Mul, Instruction::FMul);
1123   if (!BO) {
1124     Factors.push_back(V);
1125     return;
1126   }
1127 
1128   // Otherwise, add the LHS and RHS to the list of factors.
1129   FindSingleUseMultiplyFactors(BO->getOperand(1), Factors);
1130   FindSingleUseMultiplyFactors(BO->getOperand(0), Factors);
1131 }
1132 
1133 /// Optimize a series of operands to an 'and', 'or', or 'xor' instruction.
1134 /// This optimizes based on identities.  If it can be reduced to a single Value,
1135 /// it is returned, otherwise the Ops list is mutated as necessary.
1136 static Value *OptimizeAndOrXor(unsigned Opcode,
1137                                SmallVectorImpl<ValueEntry> &Ops) {
1138   // Scan the operand lists looking for X and ~X pairs, along with X,X pairs.
1139   // If we find any, we can simplify the expression. X&~X == 0, X|~X == -1.
1140   for (unsigned i = 0, e = Ops.size(); i != e; ++i) {
1141     // First, check for X and ~X in the operand list.
1142     assert(i < Ops.size());
1143     Value *X;
1144     if (match(Ops[i].Op, m_Not(m_Value(X)))) {    // Cannot occur for ^.
1145       unsigned FoundX = FindInOperandList(Ops, i, X);
1146       if (FoundX != i) {
1147         if (Opcode == Instruction::And)   // ...&X&~X = 0
1148           return Constant::getNullValue(X->getType());
1149 
1150         if (Opcode == Instruction::Or)    // ...|X|~X = -1
1151           return Constant::getAllOnesValue(X->getType());
1152       }
1153     }
1154 
1155     // Next, check for duplicate pairs of values, which we assume are next to
1156     // each other, due to our sorting criteria.
1157     assert(i < Ops.size());
1158     if (i+1 != Ops.size() && Ops[i+1].Op == Ops[i].Op) {
1159       if (Opcode == Instruction::And || Opcode == Instruction::Or) {
1160         // Drop duplicate values for And and Or.
1161         Ops.erase(Ops.begin()+i);
1162         --i; --e;
1163         ++NumAnnihil;
1164         continue;
1165       }
1166 
1167       // Drop pairs of values for Xor.
1168       assert(Opcode == Instruction::Xor);
1169       if (e == 2)
1170         return Constant::getNullValue(Ops[0].Op->getType());
1171 
1172       // Y ^ X^X -> Y
1173       Ops.erase(Ops.begin()+i, Ops.begin()+i+2);
1174       i -= 1; e -= 2;
1175       ++NumAnnihil;
1176     }
1177   }
1178   return nullptr;
1179 }
1180 
1181 /// Helper function of CombineXorOpnd(). It creates a bitwise-and
1182 /// instruction with the given two operands, and return the resulting
1183 /// instruction. There are two special cases: 1) if the constant operand is 0,
1184 /// it will return NULL. 2) if the constant is ~0, the symbolic operand will
1185 /// be returned.
1186 static Value *createAndInstr(Instruction *InsertBefore, Value *Opnd,
1187                              const APInt &ConstOpnd) {
1188   if (ConstOpnd.isNullValue())
1189     return nullptr;
1190 
1191   if (ConstOpnd.isAllOnesValue())
1192     return Opnd;
1193 
1194   Instruction *I = BinaryOperator::CreateAnd(
1195       Opnd, ConstantInt::get(Opnd->getType(), ConstOpnd), "and.ra",
1196       InsertBefore);
1197   I->setDebugLoc(InsertBefore->getDebugLoc());
1198   return I;
1199 }
1200 
1201 // Helper function of OptimizeXor(). It tries to simplify "Opnd1 ^ ConstOpnd"
1202 // into "R ^ C", where C would be 0, and R is a symbolic value.
1203 //
1204 // If it was successful, true is returned, and the "R" and "C" is returned
1205 // via "Res" and "ConstOpnd", respectively; otherwise, false is returned,
1206 // and both "Res" and "ConstOpnd" remain unchanged.
1207 bool ReassociatePass::CombineXorOpnd(Instruction *I, XorOpnd *Opnd1,
1208                                      APInt &ConstOpnd, Value *&Res) {
1209   // Xor-Rule 1: (x | c1) ^ c2 = (x | c1) ^ (c1 ^ c1) ^ c2
1210   //                       = ((x | c1) ^ c1) ^ (c1 ^ c2)
1211   //                       = (x & ~c1) ^ (c1 ^ c2)
1212   // It is useful only when c1 == c2.
1213   if (!Opnd1->isOrExpr() || Opnd1->getConstPart().isNullValue())
1214     return false;
1215 
1216   if (!Opnd1->getValue()->hasOneUse())
1217     return false;
1218 
1219   const APInt &C1 = Opnd1->getConstPart();
1220   if (C1 != ConstOpnd)
1221     return false;
1222 
1223   Value *X = Opnd1->getSymbolicPart();
1224   Res = createAndInstr(I, X, ~C1);
1225   // ConstOpnd was C2, now C1 ^ C2.
1226   ConstOpnd ^= C1;
1227 
1228   if (Instruction *T = dyn_cast<Instruction>(Opnd1->getValue()))
1229     RedoInsts.insert(T);
1230   return true;
1231 }
1232 
1233 // Helper function of OptimizeXor(). It tries to simplify
1234 // "Opnd1 ^ Opnd2 ^ ConstOpnd" into "R ^ C", where C would be 0, and R is a
1235 // symbolic value.
1236 //
1237 // If it was successful, true is returned, and the "R" and "C" is returned
1238 // via "Res" and "ConstOpnd", respectively (If the entire expression is
1239 // evaluated to a constant, the Res is set to NULL); otherwise, false is
1240 // returned, and both "Res" and "ConstOpnd" remain unchanged.
1241 bool ReassociatePass::CombineXorOpnd(Instruction *I, XorOpnd *Opnd1,
1242                                      XorOpnd *Opnd2, APInt &ConstOpnd,
1243                                      Value *&Res) {
1244   Value *X = Opnd1->getSymbolicPart();
1245   if (X != Opnd2->getSymbolicPart())
1246     return false;
1247 
1248   // This many instruction become dead.(At least "Opnd1 ^ Opnd2" will die.)
1249   int DeadInstNum = 1;
1250   if (Opnd1->getValue()->hasOneUse())
1251     DeadInstNum++;
1252   if (Opnd2->getValue()->hasOneUse())
1253     DeadInstNum++;
1254 
1255   // Xor-Rule 2:
1256   //  (x | c1) ^ (x & c2)
1257   //   = (x|c1) ^ (x&c2) ^ (c1 ^ c1) = ((x|c1) ^ c1) ^ (x & c2) ^ c1
1258   //   = (x & ~c1) ^ (x & c2) ^ c1               // Xor-Rule 1
1259   //   = (x & c3) ^ c1, where c3 = ~c1 ^ c2      // Xor-rule 3
1260   //
1261   if (Opnd1->isOrExpr() != Opnd2->isOrExpr()) {
1262     if (Opnd2->isOrExpr())
1263       std::swap(Opnd1, Opnd2);
1264 
1265     const APInt &C1 = Opnd1->getConstPart();
1266     const APInt &C2 = Opnd2->getConstPart();
1267     APInt C3((~C1) ^ C2);
1268 
1269     // Do not increase code size!
1270     if (!C3.isNullValue() && !C3.isAllOnesValue()) {
1271       int NewInstNum = ConstOpnd.getBoolValue() ? 1 : 2;
1272       if (NewInstNum > DeadInstNum)
1273         return false;
1274     }
1275 
1276     Res = createAndInstr(I, X, C3);
1277     ConstOpnd ^= C1;
1278   } else if (Opnd1->isOrExpr()) {
1279     // Xor-Rule 3: (x | c1) ^ (x | c2) = (x & c3) ^ c3 where c3 = c1 ^ c2
1280     //
1281     const APInt &C1 = Opnd1->getConstPart();
1282     const APInt &C2 = Opnd2->getConstPart();
1283     APInt C3 = C1 ^ C2;
1284 
1285     // Do not increase code size
1286     if (!C3.isNullValue() && !C3.isAllOnesValue()) {
1287       int NewInstNum = ConstOpnd.getBoolValue() ? 1 : 2;
1288       if (NewInstNum > DeadInstNum)
1289         return false;
1290     }
1291 
1292     Res = createAndInstr(I, X, C3);
1293     ConstOpnd ^= C3;
1294   } else {
1295     // Xor-Rule 4: (x & c1) ^ (x & c2) = (x & (c1^c2))
1296     //
1297     const APInt &C1 = Opnd1->getConstPart();
1298     const APInt &C2 = Opnd2->getConstPart();
1299     APInt C3 = C1 ^ C2;
1300     Res = createAndInstr(I, X, C3);
1301   }
1302 
1303   // Put the original operands in the Redo list; hope they will be deleted
1304   // as dead code.
1305   if (Instruction *T = dyn_cast<Instruction>(Opnd1->getValue()))
1306     RedoInsts.insert(T);
1307   if (Instruction *T = dyn_cast<Instruction>(Opnd2->getValue()))
1308     RedoInsts.insert(T);
1309 
1310   return true;
1311 }
1312 
1313 /// Optimize a series of operands to an 'xor' instruction. If it can be reduced
1314 /// to a single Value, it is returned, otherwise the Ops list is mutated as
1315 /// necessary.
1316 Value *ReassociatePass::OptimizeXor(Instruction *I,
1317                                     SmallVectorImpl<ValueEntry> &Ops) {
1318   if (Value *V = OptimizeAndOrXor(Instruction::Xor, Ops))
1319     return V;
1320 
1321   if (Ops.size() == 1)
1322     return nullptr;
1323 
1324   SmallVector<XorOpnd, 8> Opnds;
1325   SmallVector<XorOpnd*, 8> OpndPtrs;
1326   Type *Ty = Ops[0].Op->getType();
1327   APInt ConstOpnd(Ty->getScalarSizeInBits(), 0);
1328 
1329   // Step 1: Convert ValueEntry to XorOpnd
1330   for (unsigned i = 0, e = Ops.size(); i != e; ++i) {
1331     Value *V = Ops[i].Op;
1332     const APInt *C;
1333     // TODO: Support non-splat vectors.
1334     if (match(V, m_APInt(C))) {
1335       ConstOpnd ^= *C;
1336     } else {
1337       XorOpnd O(V);
1338       O.setSymbolicRank(getRank(O.getSymbolicPart()));
1339       Opnds.push_back(O);
1340     }
1341   }
1342 
1343   // NOTE: From this point on, do *NOT* add/delete element to/from "Opnds".
1344   //  It would otherwise invalidate the "Opnds"'s iterator, and hence invalidate
1345   //  the "OpndPtrs" as well. For the similar reason, do not fuse this loop
1346   //  with the previous loop --- the iterator of the "Opnds" may be invalidated
1347   //  when new elements are added to the vector.
1348   for (unsigned i = 0, e = Opnds.size(); i != e; ++i)
1349     OpndPtrs.push_back(&Opnds[i]);
1350 
1351   // Step 2: Sort the Xor-Operands in a way such that the operands containing
1352   //  the same symbolic value cluster together. For instance, the input operand
1353   //  sequence ("x | 123", "y & 456", "x & 789") will be sorted into:
1354   //  ("x | 123", "x & 789", "y & 456").
1355   //
1356   //  The purpose is twofold:
1357   //  1) Cluster together the operands sharing the same symbolic-value.
1358   //  2) Operand having smaller symbolic-value-rank is permuted earlier, which
1359   //     could potentially shorten crital path, and expose more loop-invariants.
1360   //     Note that values' rank are basically defined in RPO order (FIXME).
1361   //     So, if Rank(X) < Rank(Y) < Rank(Z), it means X is defined earlier
1362   //     than Y which is defined earlier than Z. Permute "x | 1", "Y & 2",
1363   //     "z" in the order of X-Y-Z is better than any other orders.
1364   llvm::stable_sort(OpndPtrs, [](XorOpnd *LHS, XorOpnd *RHS) {
1365     return LHS->getSymbolicRank() < RHS->getSymbolicRank();
1366   });
1367 
1368   // Step 3: Combine adjacent operands
1369   XorOpnd *PrevOpnd = nullptr;
1370   bool Changed = false;
1371   for (unsigned i = 0, e = Opnds.size(); i < e; i++) {
1372     XorOpnd *CurrOpnd = OpndPtrs[i];
1373     // The combined value
1374     Value *CV;
1375 
1376     // Step 3.1: Try simplifying "CurrOpnd ^ ConstOpnd"
1377     if (!ConstOpnd.isNullValue() &&
1378         CombineXorOpnd(I, CurrOpnd, ConstOpnd, CV)) {
1379       Changed = true;
1380       if (CV)
1381         *CurrOpnd = XorOpnd(CV);
1382       else {
1383         CurrOpnd->Invalidate();
1384         continue;
1385       }
1386     }
1387 
1388     if (!PrevOpnd || CurrOpnd->getSymbolicPart() != PrevOpnd->getSymbolicPart()) {
1389       PrevOpnd = CurrOpnd;
1390       continue;
1391     }
1392 
1393     // step 3.2: When previous and current operands share the same symbolic
1394     //  value, try to simplify "PrevOpnd ^ CurrOpnd ^ ConstOpnd"
1395     if (CombineXorOpnd(I, CurrOpnd, PrevOpnd, ConstOpnd, CV)) {
1396       // Remove previous operand
1397       PrevOpnd->Invalidate();
1398       if (CV) {
1399         *CurrOpnd = XorOpnd(CV);
1400         PrevOpnd = CurrOpnd;
1401       } else {
1402         CurrOpnd->Invalidate();
1403         PrevOpnd = nullptr;
1404       }
1405       Changed = true;
1406     }
1407   }
1408 
1409   // Step 4: Reassemble the Ops
1410   if (Changed) {
1411     Ops.clear();
1412     for (unsigned int i = 0, e = Opnds.size(); i < e; i++) {
1413       XorOpnd &O = Opnds[i];
1414       if (O.isInvalid())
1415         continue;
1416       ValueEntry VE(getRank(O.getValue()), O.getValue());
1417       Ops.push_back(VE);
1418     }
1419     if (!ConstOpnd.isNullValue()) {
1420       Value *C = ConstantInt::get(Ty, ConstOpnd);
1421       ValueEntry VE(getRank(C), C);
1422       Ops.push_back(VE);
1423     }
1424     unsigned Sz = Ops.size();
1425     if (Sz == 1)
1426       return Ops.back().Op;
1427     if (Sz == 0) {
1428       assert(ConstOpnd.isNullValue());
1429       return ConstantInt::get(Ty, ConstOpnd);
1430     }
1431   }
1432 
1433   return nullptr;
1434 }
1435 
1436 /// Optimize a series of operands to an 'add' instruction.  This
1437 /// optimizes based on identities.  If it can be reduced to a single Value, it
1438 /// is returned, otherwise the Ops list is mutated as necessary.
1439 Value *ReassociatePass::OptimizeAdd(Instruction *I,
1440                                     SmallVectorImpl<ValueEntry> &Ops) {
1441   // Scan the operand lists looking for X and -X pairs.  If we find any, we
1442   // can simplify expressions like X+-X == 0 and X+~X ==-1.  While we're at it,
1443   // scan for any
1444   // duplicates.  We want to canonicalize Y+Y+Y+Z -> 3*Y+Z.
1445 
1446   for (unsigned i = 0, e = Ops.size(); i != e; ++i) {
1447     Value *TheOp = Ops[i].Op;
1448     // Check to see if we've seen this operand before.  If so, we factor all
1449     // instances of the operand together.  Due to our sorting criteria, we know
1450     // that these need to be next to each other in the vector.
1451     if (i+1 != Ops.size() && Ops[i+1].Op == TheOp) {
1452       // Rescan the list, remove all instances of this operand from the expr.
1453       unsigned NumFound = 0;
1454       do {
1455         Ops.erase(Ops.begin()+i);
1456         ++NumFound;
1457       } while (i != Ops.size() && Ops[i].Op == TheOp);
1458 
1459       LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << "\nFACTORING [" << NumFound << "]: " << *TheOp
1460                         << '\n');
1461       ++NumFactor;
1462 
1463       // Insert a new multiply.
1464       Type *Ty = TheOp->getType();
1465       Constant *C = Ty->isIntOrIntVectorTy() ?
1466         ConstantInt::get(Ty, NumFound) : ConstantFP::get(Ty, NumFound);
1467       Instruction *Mul = CreateMul(TheOp, C, "factor", I, I);
1468 
1469       // Now that we have inserted a multiply, optimize it. This allows us to
1470       // handle cases that require multiple factoring steps, such as this:
1471       // (X*2) + (X*2) + (X*2) -> (X*2)*3 -> X*6
1472       RedoInsts.insert(Mul);
1473 
1474       // If every add operand was a duplicate, return the multiply.
1475       if (Ops.empty())
1476         return Mul;
1477 
1478       // Otherwise, we had some input that didn't have the dupe, such as
1479       // "A + A + B" -> "A*2 + B".  Add the new multiply to the list of
1480       // things being added by this operation.
1481       Ops.insert(Ops.begin(), ValueEntry(getRank(Mul), Mul));
1482 
1483       --i;
1484       e = Ops.size();
1485       continue;
1486     }
1487 
1488     // Check for X and -X or X and ~X in the operand list.
1489     Value *X;
1490     if (!match(TheOp, m_Neg(m_Value(X))) && !match(TheOp, m_Not(m_Value(X))) &&
1491         !match(TheOp, m_FNeg(m_Value(X))))
1492       continue;
1493 
1494     unsigned FoundX = FindInOperandList(Ops, i, X);
1495     if (FoundX == i)
1496       continue;
1497 
1498     // Remove X and -X from the operand list.
1499     if (Ops.size() == 2 &&
1500         (match(TheOp, m_Neg(m_Value())) || match(TheOp, m_FNeg(m_Value()))))
1501       return Constant::getNullValue(X->getType());
1502 
1503     // Remove X and ~X from the operand list.
1504     if (Ops.size() == 2 && match(TheOp, m_Not(m_Value())))
1505       return Constant::getAllOnesValue(X->getType());
1506 
1507     Ops.erase(Ops.begin()+i);
1508     if (i < FoundX)
1509       --FoundX;
1510     else
1511       --i;   // Need to back up an extra one.
1512     Ops.erase(Ops.begin()+FoundX);
1513     ++NumAnnihil;
1514     --i;     // Revisit element.
1515     e -= 2;  // Removed two elements.
1516 
1517     // if X and ~X we append -1 to the operand list.
1518     if (match(TheOp, m_Not(m_Value()))) {
1519       Value *V = Constant::getAllOnesValue(X->getType());
1520       Ops.insert(Ops.end(), ValueEntry(getRank(V), V));
1521       e += 1;
1522     }
1523   }
1524 
1525   // Scan the operand list, checking to see if there are any common factors
1526   // between operands.  Consider something like A*A+A*B*C+D.  We would like to
1527   // reassociate this to A*(A+B*C)+D, which reduces the number of multiplies.
1528   // To efficiently find this, we count the number of times a factor occurs
1529   // for any ADD operands that are MULs.
1530   DenseMap<Value*, unsigned> FactorOccurrences;
1531 
1532   // Keep track of each multiply we see, to avoid triggering on (X*4)+(X*4)
1533   // where they are actually the same multiply.
1534   unsigned MaxOcc = 0;
1535   Value *MaxOccVal = nullptr;
1536   for (unsigned i = 0, e = Ops.size(); i != e; ++i) {
1537     BinaryOperator *BOp =
1538         isReassociableOp(Ops[i].Op, Instruction::Mul, Instruction::FMul);
1539     if (!BOp)
1540       continue;
1541 
1542     // Compute all of the factors of this added value.
1543     SmallVector<Value*, 8> Factors;
1544     FindSingleUseMultiplyFactors(BOp, Factors);
1545     assert(Factors.size() > 1 && "Bad linearize!");
1546 
1547     // Add one to FactorOccurrences for each unique factor in this op.
1548     SmallPtrSet<Value*, 8> Duplicates;
1549     for (unsigned i = 0, e = Factors.size(); i != e; ++i) {
1550       Value *Factor = Factors[i];
1551       if (!Duplicates.insert(Factor).second)
1552         continue;
1553 
1554       unsigned Occ = ++FactorOccurrences[Factor];
1555       if (Occ > MaxOcc) {
1556         MaxOcc = Occ;
1557         MaxOccVal = Factor;
1558       }
1559 
1560       // If Factor is a negative constant, add the negated value as a factor
1561       // because we can percolate the negate out.  Watch for minint, which
1562       // cannot be positivified.
1563       if (ConstantInt *CI = dyn_cast<ConstantInt>(Factor)) {
1564         if (CI->isNegative() && !CI->isMinValue(true)) {
1565           Factor = ConstantInt::get(CI->getContext(), -CI->getValue());
1566           if (!Duplicates.insert(Factor).second)
1567             continue;
1568           unsigned Occ = ++FactorOccurrences[Factor];
1569           if (Occ > MaxOcc) {
1570             MaxOcc = Occ;
1571             MaxOccVal = Factor;
1572           }
1573         }
1574       } else if (ConstantFP *CF = dyn_cast<ConstantFP>(Factor)) {
1575         if (CF->isNegative()) {
1576           APFloat F(CF->getValueAPF());
1577           F.changeSign();
1578           Factor = ConstantFP::get(CF->getContext(), F);
1579           if (!Duplicates.insert(Factor).second)
1580             continue;
1581           unsigned Occ = ++FactorOccurrences[Factor];
1582           if (Occ > MaxOcc) {
1583             MaxOcc = Occ;
1584             MaxOccVal = Factor;
1585           }
1586         }
1587       }
1588     }
1589   }
1590 
1591   // If any factor occurred more than one time, we can pull it out.
1592   if (MaxOcc > 1) {
1593     LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << "\nFACTORING [" << MaxOcc << "]: " << *MaxOccVal
1594                       << '\n');
1595     ++NumFactor;
1596 
1597     // Create a new instruction that uses the MaxOccVal twice.  If we don't do
1598     // this, we could otherwise run into situations where removing a factor
1599     // from an expression will drop a use of maxocc, and this can cause
1600     // RemoveFactorFromExpression on successive values to behave differently.
1601     Instruction *DummyInst =
1602         I->getType()->isIntOrIntVectorTy()
1603             ? BinaryOperator::CreateAdd(MaxOccVal, MaxOccVal)
1604             : BinaryOperator::CreateFAdd(MaxOccVal, MaxOccVal);
1605 
1606     SmallVector<WeakTrackingVH, 4> NewMulOps;
1607     for (unsigned i = 0; i != Ops.size(); ++i) {
1608       // Only try to remove factors from expressions we're allowed to.
1609       BinaryOperator *BOp =
1610           isReassociableOp(Ops[i].Op, Instruction::Mul, Instruction::FMul);
1611       if (!BOp)
1612         continue;
1613 
1614       if (Value *V = RemoveFactorFromExpression(Ops[i].Op, MaxOccVal)) {
1615         // The factorized operand may occur several times.  Convert them all in
1616         // one fell swoop.
1617         for (unsigned j = Ops.size(); j != i;) {
1618           --j;
1619           if (Ops[j].Op == Ops[i].Op) {
1620             NewMulOps.push_back(V);
1621             Ops.erase(Ops.begin()+j);
1622           }
1623         }
1624         --i;
1625       }
1626     }
1627 
1628     // No need for extra uses anymore.
1629     DummyInst->deleteValue();
1630 
1631     unsigned NumAddedValues = NewMulOps.size();
1632     Value *V = EmitAddTreeOfValues(I, NewMulOps);
1633 
1634     // Now that we have inserted the add tree, optimize it. This allows us to
1635     // handle cases that require multiple factoring steps, such as this:
1636     // A*A*B + A*A*C   -->   A*(A*B+A*C)   -->   A*(A*(B+C))
1637     assert(NumAddedValues > 1 && "Each occurrence should contribute a value");
1638     (void)NumAddedValues;
1639     if (Instruction *VI = dyn_cast<Instruction>(V))
1640       RedoInsts.insert(VI);
1641 
1642     // Create the multiply.
1643     Instruction *V2 = CreateMul(V, MaxOccVal, "reass.mul", I, I);
1644 
1645     // Rerun associate on the multiply in case the inner expression turned into
1646     // a multiply.  We want to make sure that we keep things in canonical form.
1647     RedoInsts.insert(V2);
1648 
1649     // If every add operand included the factor (e.g. "A*B + A*C"), then the
1650     // entire result expression is just the multiply "A*(B+C)".
1651     if (Ops.empty())
1652       return V2;
1653 
1654     // Otherwise, we had some input that didn't have the factor, such as
1655     // "A*B + A*C + D" -> "A*(B+C) + D".  Add the new multiply to the list of
1656     // things being added by this operation.
1657     Ops.insert(Ops.begin(), ValueEntry(getRank(V2), V2));
1658   }
1659 
1660   return nullptr;
1661 }
1662 
1663 /// Build up a vector of value/power pairs factoring a product.
1664 ///
1665 /// Given a series of multiplication operands, build a vector of factors and
1666 /// the powers each is raised to when forming the final product. Sort them in
1667 /// the order of descending power.
1668 ///
1669 ///      (x*x)          -> [(x, 2)]
1670 ///     ((x*x)*x)       -> [(x, 3)]
1671 ///   ((((x*y)*x)*y)*x) -> [(x, 3), (y, 2)]
1672 ///
1673 /// \returns Whether any factors have a power greater than one.
1674 static bool collectMultiplyFactors(SmallVectorImpl<ValueEntry> &Ops,
1675                                    SmallVectorImpl<Factor> &Factors) {
1676   // FIXME: Have Ops be (ValueEntry, Multiplicity) pairs, simplifying this.
1677   // Compute the sum of powers of simplifiable factors.
1678   unsigned FactorPowerSum = 0;
1679   for (unsigned Idx = 1, Size = Ops.size(); Idx < Size; ++Idx) {
1680     Value *Op = Ops[Idx-1].Op;
1681 
1682     // Count the number of occurrences of this value.
1683     unsigned Count = 1;
1684     for (; Idx < Size && Ops[Idx].Op == Op; ++Idx)
1685       ++Count;
1686     // Track for simplification all factors which occur 2 or more times.
1687     if (Count > 1)
1688       FactorPowerSum += Count;
1689   }
1690 
1691   // We can only simplify factors if the sum of the powers of our simplifiable
1692   // factors is 4 or higher. When that is the case, we will *always* have
1693   // a simplification. This is an important invariant to prevent cyclicly
1694   // trying to simplify already minimal formations.
1695   if (FactorPowerSum < 4)
1696     return false;
1697 
1698   // Now gather the simplifiable factors, removing them from Ops.
1699   FactorPowerSum = 0;
1700   for (unsigned Idx = 1; Idx < Ops.size(); ++Idx) {
1701     Value *Op = Ops[Idx-1].Op;
1702 
1703     // Count the number of occurrences of this value.
1704     unsigned Count = 1;
1705     for (; Idx < Ops.size() && Ops[Idx].Op == Op; ++Idx)
1706       ++Count;
1707     if (Count == 1)
1708       continue;
1709     // Move an even number of occurrences to Factors.
1710     Count &= ~1U;
1711     Idx -= Count;
1712     FactorPowerSum += Count;
1713     Factors.push_back(Factor(Op, Count));
1714     Ops.erase(Ops.begin()+Idx, Ops.begin()+Idx+Count);
1715   }
1716 
1717   // None of the adjustments above should have reduced the sum of factor powers
1718   // below our mininum of '4'.
1719   assert(FactorPowerSum >= 4);
1720 
1721   llvm::stable_sort(Factors, [](const Factor &LHS, const Factor &RHS) {
1722     return LHS.Power > RHS.Power;
1723   });
1724   return true;
1725 }
1726 
1727 /// Build a tree of multiplies, computing the product of Ops.
1728 static Value *buildMultiplyTree(IRBuilderBase &Builder,
1729                                 SmallVectorImpl<Value*> &Ops) {
1730   if (Ops.size() == 1)
1731     return Ops.back();
1732 
1733   Value *LHS = Ops.pop_back_val();
1734   do {
1735     if (LHS->getType()->isIntOrIntVectorTy())
1736       LHS = Builder.CreateMul(LHS, Ops.pop_back_val());
1737     else
1738       LHS = Builder.CreateFMul(LHS, Ops.pop_back_val());
1739   } while (!Ops.empty());
1740 
1741   return LHS;
1742 }
1743 
1744 /// Build a minimal multiplication DAG for (a^x)*(b^y)*(c^z)*...
1745 ///
1746 /// Given a vector of values raised to various powers, where no two values are
1747 /// equal and the powers are sorted in decreasing order, compute the minimal
1748 /// DAG of multiplies to compute the final product, and return that product
1749 /// value.
1750 Value *
1751 ReassociatePass::buildMinimalMultiplyDAG(IRBuilderBase &Builder,
1752                                          SmallVectorImpl<Factor> &Factors) {
1753   assert(Factors[0].Power);
1754   SmallVector<Value *, 4> OuterProduct;
1755   for (unsigned LastIdx = 0, Idx = 1, Size = Factors.size();
1756        Idx < Size && Factors[Idx].Power > 0; ++Idx) {
1757     if (Factors[Idx].Power != Factors[LastIdx].Power) {
1758       LastIdx = Idx;
1759       continue;
1760     }
1761 
1762     // We want to multiply across all the factors with the same power so that
1763     // we can raise them to that power as a single entity. Build a mini tree
1764     // for that.
1765     SmallVector<Value *, 4> InnerProduct;
1766     InnerProduct.push_back(Factors[LastIdx].Base);
1767     do {
1768       InnerProduct.push_back(Factors[Idx].Base);
1769       ++Idx;
1770     } while (Idx < Size && Factors[Idx].Power == Factors[LastIdx].Power);
1771 
1772     // Reset the base value of the first factor to the new expression tree.
1773     // We'll remove all the factors with the same power in a second pass.
1774     Value *M = Factors[LastIdx].Base = buildMultiplyTree(Builder, InnerProduct);
1775     if (Instruction *MI = dyn_cast<Instruction>(M))
1776       RedoInsts.insert(MI);
1777 
1778     LastIdx = Idx;
1779   }
1780   // Unique factors with equal powers -- we've folded them into the first one's
1781   // base.
1782   Factors.erase(std::unique(Factors.begin(), Factors.end(),
1783                             [](const Factor &LHS, const Factor &RHS) {
1784                               return LHS.Power == RHS.Power;
1785                             }),
1786                 Factors.end());
1787 
1788   // Iteratively collect the base of each factor with an add power into the
1789   // outer product, and halve each power in preparation for squaring the
1790   // expression.
1791   for (unsigned Idx = 0, Size = Factors.size(); Idx != Size; ++Idx) {
1792     if (Factors[Idx].Power & 1)
1793       OuterProduct.push_back(Factors[Idx].Base);
1794     Factors[Idx].Power >>= 1;
1795   }
1796   if (Factors[0].Power) {
1797     Value *SquareRoot = buildMinimalMultiplyDAG(Builder, Factors);
1798     OuterProduct.push_back(SquareRoot);
1799     OuterProduct.push_back(SquareRoot);
1800   }
1801   if (OuterProduct.size() == 1)
1802     return OuterProduct.front();
1803 
1804   Value *V = buildMultiplyTree(Builder, OuterProduct);
1805   return V;
1806 }
1807 
1808 Value *ReassociatePass::OptimizeMul(BinaryOperator *I,
1809                                     SmallVectorImpl<ValueEntry> &Ops) {
1810   // We can only optimize the multiplies when there is a chain of more than
1811   // three, such that a balanced tree might require fewer total multiplies.
1812   if (Ops.size() < 4)
1813     return nullptr;
1814 
1815   // Try to turn linear trees of multiplies without other uses of the
1816   // intermediate stages into minimal multiply DAGs with perfect sub-expression
1817   // re-use.
1818   SmallVector<Factor, 4> Factors;
1819   if (!collectMultiplyFactors(Ops, Factors))
1820     return nullptr; // All distinct factors, so nothing left for us to do.
1821 
1822   IRBuilder<> Builder(I);
1823   // The reassociate transformation for FP operations is performed only
1824   // if unsafe algebra is permitted by FastMathFlags. Propagate those flags
1825   // to the newly generated operations.
1826   if (auto FPI = dyn_cast<FPMathOperator>(I))
1827     Builder.setFastMathFlags(FPI->getFastMathFlags());
1828 
1829   Value *V = buildMinimalMultiplyDAG(Builder, Factors);
1830   if (Ops.empty())
1831     return V;
1832 
1833   ValueEntry NewEntry = ValueEntry(getRank(V), V);
1834   Ops.insert(llvm::lower_bound(Ops, NewEntry), NewEntry);
1835   return nullptr;
1836 }
1837 
1838 Value *ReassociatePass::OptimizeExpression(BinaryOperator *I,
1839                                            SmallVectorImpl<ValueEntry> &Ops) {
1840   // Now that we have the linearized expression tree, try to optimize it.
1841   // Start by folding any constants that we found.
1842   Constant *Cst = nullptr;
1843   unsigned Opcode = I->getOpcode();
1844   while (!Ops.empty() && isa<Constant>(Ops.back().Op)) {
1845     Constant *C = cast<Constant>(Ops.pop_back_val().Op);
1846     Cst = Cst ? ConstantExpr::get(Opcode, C, Cst) : C;
1847   }
1848   // If there was nothing but constants then we are done.
1849   if (Ops.empty())
1850     return Cst;
1851 
1852   // Put the combined constant back at the end of the operand list, except if
1853   // there is no point.  For example, an add of 0 gets dropped here, while a
1854   // multiplication by zero turns the whole expression into zero.
1855   if (Cst && Cst != ConstantExpr::getBinOpIdentity(Opcode, I->getType())) {
1856     if (Cst == ConstantExpr::getBinOpAbsorber(Opcode, I->getType()))
1857       return Cst;
1858     Ops.push_back(ValueEntry(0, Cst));
1859   }
1860 
1861   if (Ops.size() == 1) return Ops[0].Op;
1862 
1863   // Handle destructive annihilation due to identities between elements in the
1864   // argument list here.
1865   unsigned NumOps = Ops.size();
1866   switch (Opcode) {
1867   default: break;
1868   case Instruction::And:
1869   case Instruction::Or:
1870     if (Value *Result = OptimizeAndOrXor(Opcode, Ops))
1871       return Result;
1872     break;
1873 
1874   case Instruction::Xor:
1875     if (Value *Result = OptimizeXor(I, Ops))
1876       return Result;
1877     break;
1878 
1879   case Instruction::Add:
1880   case Instruction::FAdd:
1881     if (Value *Result = OptimizeAdd(I, Ops))
1882       return Result;
1883     break;
1884 
1885   case Instruction::Mul:
1886   case Instruction::FMul:
1887     if (Value *Result = OptimizeMul(I, Ops))
1888       return Result;
1889     break;
1890   }
1891 
1892   if (Ops.size() != NumOps)
1893     return OptimizeExpression(I, Ops);
1894   return nullptr;
1895 }
1896 
1897 // Remove dead instructions and if any operands are trivially dead add them to
1898 // Insts so they will be removed as well.
1899 void ReassociatePass::RecursivelyEraseDeadInsts(Instruction *I,
1900                                                 OrderedSet &Insts) {
1901   assert(isInstructionTriviallyDead(I) && "Trivially dead instructions only!");
1902   SmallVector<Value *, 4> Ops(I->op_begin(), I->op_end());
1903   ValueRankMap.erase(I);
1904   Insts.remove(I);
1905   RedoInsts.remove(I);
1906   llvm::salvageDebugInfo(*I);
1907   I->eraseFromParent();
1908   for (auto Op : Ops)
1909     if (Instruction *OpInst = dyn_cast<Instruction>(Op))
1910       if (OpInst->use_empty())
1911         Insts.insert(OpInst);
1912 }
1913 
1914 /// Zap the given instruction, adding interesting operands to the work list.
1915 void ReassociatePass::EraseInst(Instruction *I) {
1916   assert(isInstructionTriviallyDead(I) && "Trivially dead instructions only!");
1917   LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << "Erasing dead inst: "; I->dump());
1918 
1919   SmallVector<Value*, 8> Ops(I->op_begin(), I->op_end());
1920   // Erase the dead instruction.
1921   ValueRankMap.erase(I);
1922   RedoInsts.remove(I);
1923   llvm::salvageDebugInfo(*I);
1924   I->eraseFromParent();
1925   // Optimize its operands.
1926   SmallPtrSet<Instruction *, 8> Visited; // Detect self-referential nodes.
1927   for (unsigned i = 0, e = Ops.size(); i != e; ++i)
1928     if (Instruction *Op = dyn_cast<Instruction>(Ops[i])) {
1929       // If this is a node in an expression tree, climb to the expression root
1930       // and add that since that's where optimization actually happens.
1931       unsigned Opcode = Op->getOpcode();
1932       while (Op->hasOneUse() && Op->user_back()->getOpcode() == Opcode &&
1933              Visited.insert(Op).second)
1934         Op = Op->user_back();
1935 
1936       // The instruction we're going to push may be coming from a
1937       // dead block, and Reassociate skips the processing of unreachable
1938       // blocks because it's a waste of time and also because it can
1939       // lead to infinite loop due to LLVM's non-standard definition
1940       // of dominance.
1941       if (ValueRankMap.find(Op) != ValueRankMap.end())
1942         RedoInsts.insert(Op);
1943     }
1944 
1945   MadeChange = true;
1946 }
1947 
1948 /// Recursively analyze an expression to build a list of instructions that have
1949 /// negative floating-point constant operands. The caller can then transform
1950 /// the list to create positive constants for better reassociation and CSE.
1951 static void getNegatibleInsts(Value *V,
1952                               SmallVectorImpl<Instruction *> &Candidates) {
1953   // Handle only one-use instructions. Combining negations does not justify
1954   // replicating instructions.
1955   Instruction *I;
1956   if (!match(V, m_OneUse(m_Instruction(I))))
1957     return;
1958 
1959   // Handle expressions of multiplications and divisions.
1960   // TODO: This could look through floating-point casts.
1961   const APFloat *C;
1962   switch (I->getOpcode()) {
1963     case Instruction::FMul:
1964       // Not expecting non-canonical code here. Bail out and wait.
1965       if (match(I->getOperand(0), m_Constant()))
1966         break;
1967 
1968       if (match(I->getOperand(1), m_APFloat(C)) && C->isNegative()) {
1969         Candidates.push_back(I);
1970         LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << "FMul with negative constant: " << *I << '\n');
1971       }
1972       getNegatibleInsts(I->getOperand(0), Candidates);
1973       getNegatibleInsts(I->getOperand(1), Candidates);
1974       break;
1975     case Instruction::FDiv:
1976       // Not expecting non-canonical code here. Bail out and wait.
1977       if (match(I->getOperand(0), m_Constant()) &&
1978           match(I->getOperand(1), m_Constant()))
1979         break;
1980 
1981       if ((match(I->getOperand(0), m_APFloat(C)) && C->isNegative()) ||
1982           (match(I->getOperand(1), m_APFloat(C)) && C->isNegative())) {
1983         Candidates.push_back(I);
1984         LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << "FDiv with negative constant: " << *I << '\n');
1985       }
1986       getNegatibleInsts(I->getOperand(0), Candidates);
1987       getNegatibleInsts(I->getOperand(1), Candidates);
1988       break;
1989     default:
1990       break;
1991   }
1992 }
1993 
1994 /// Given an fadd/fsub with an operand that is a one-use instruction
1995 /// (the fadd/fsub), try to change negative floating-point constants into
1996 /// positive constants to increase potential for reassociation and CSE.
1997 Instruction *ReassociatePass::canonicalizeNegFPConstantsForOp(Instruction *I,
1998                                                               Instruction *Op,
1999                                                               Value *OtherOp) {
2000   assert((I->getOpcode() == Instruction::FAdd ||
2001           I->getOpcode() == Instruction::FSub) && "Expected fadd/fsub");
2002 
2003   // Collect instructions with negative FP constants from the subtree that ends
2004   // in Op.
2005   SmallVector<Instruction *, 4> Candidates;
2006   getNegatibleInsts(Op, Candidates);
2007   if (Candidates.empty())
2008     return nullptr;
2009 
2010   // Don't canonicalize x + (-Constant * y) -> x - (Constant * y), if the
2011   // resulting subtract will be broken up later.  This can get us into an
2012   // infinite loop during reassociation.
2013   bool IsFSub = I->getOpcode() == Instruction::FSub;
2014   bool NeedsSubtract = !IsFSub && Candidates.size() % 2 == 1;
2015   if (NeedsSubtract && ShouldBreakUpSubtract(I))
2016     return nullptr;
2017 
2018   for (Instruction *Negatible : Candidates) {
2019     const APFloat *C;
2020     if (match(Negatible->getOperand(0), m_APFloat(C))) {
2021       assert(!match(Negatible->getOperand(1), m_Constant()) &&
2022              "Expecting only 1 constant operand");
2023       assert(C->isNegative() && "Expected negative FP constant");
2024       Negatible->setOperand(0, ConstantFP::get(Negatible->getType(), abs(*C)));
2025       MadeChange = true;
2026     }
2027     if (match(Negatible->getOperand(1), m_APFloat(C))) {
2028       assert(!match(Negatible->getOperand(0), m_Constant()) &&
2029              "Expecting only 1 constant operand");
2030       assert(C->isNegative() && "Expected negative FP constant");
2031       Negatible->setOperand(1, ConstantFP::get(Negatible->getType(), abs(*C)));
2032       MadeChange = true;
2033     }
2034   }
2035   assert(MadeChange == true && "Negative constant candidate was not changed");
2036 
2037   // Negations cancelled out.
2038   if (Candidates.size() % 2 == 0)
2039     return I;
2040 
2041   // Negate the final operand in the expression by flipping the opcode of this
2042   // fadd/fsub.
2043   assert(Candidates.size() % 2 == 1 && "Expected odd number");
2044   IRBuilder<> Builder(I);
2045   Value *NewInst = IsFSub ? Builder.CreateFAddFMF(OtherOp, Op, I)
2046                           : Builder.CreateFSubFMF(OtherOp, Op, I);
2047   I->replaceAllUsesWith(NewInst);
2048   RedoInsts.insert(I);
2049   return dyn_cast<Instruction>(NewInst);
2050 }
2051 
2052 /// Canonicalize expressions that contain a negative floating-point constant
2053 /// of the following form:
2054 ///   OtherOp + (subtree) -> OtherOp {+/-} (canonical subtree)
2055 ///   (subtree) + OtherOp -> OtherOp {+/-} (canonical subtree)
2056 ///   OtherOp - (subtree) -> OtherOp {+/-} (canonical subtree)
2057 ///
2058 /// The fadd/fsub opcode may be switched to allow folding a negation into the
2059 /// input instruction.
2060 Instruction *ReassociatePass::canonicalizeNegFPConstants(Instruction *I) {
2061   LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << "Combine negations for: " << *I << '\n');
2062   Value *X;
2063   Instruction *Op;
2064   if (match(I, m_FAdd(m_Value(X), m_OneUse(m_Instruction(Op)))))
2065     if (Instruction *R = canonicalizeNegFPConstantsForOp(I, Op, X))
2066       I = R;
2067   if (match(I, m_FAdd(m_OneUse(m_Instruction(Op)), m_Value(X))))
2068     if (Instruction *R = canonicalizeNegFPConstantsForOp(I, Op, X))
2069       I = R;
2070   if (match(I, m_FSub(m_Value(X), m_OneUse(m_Instruction(Op)))))
2071     if (Instruction *R = canonicalizeNegFPConstantsForOp(I, Op, X))
2072       I = R;
2073   return I;
2074 }
2075 
2076 /// Inspect and optimize the given instruction. Note that erasing
2077 /// instructions is not allowed.
2078 void ReassociatePass::OptimizeInst(Instruction *I) {
2079   // Only consider operations that we understand.
2080   if (!isa<UnaryOperator>(I) && !isa<BinaryOperator>(I))
2081     return;
2082 
2083   if (I->getOpcode() == Instruction::Shl && isa<ConstantInt>(I->getOperand(1)))
2084     // If an operand of this shift is a reassociable multiply, or if the shift
2085     // is used by a reassociable multiply or add, turn into a multiply.
2086     if (isReassociableOp(I->getOperand(0), Instruction::Mul) ||
2087         (I->hasOneUse() &&
2088          (isReassociableOp(I->user_back(), Instruction::Mul) ||
2089           isReassociableOp(I->user_back(), Instruction::Add)))) {
2090       Instruction *NI = ConvertShiftToMul(I);
2091       RedoInsts.insert(I);
2092       MadeChange = true;
2093       I = NI;
2094     }
2095 
2096   // Commute binary operators, to canonicalize the order of their operands.
2097   // This can potentially expose more CSE opportunities, and makes writing other
2098   // transformations simpler.
2099   if (I->isCommutative())
2100     canonicalizeOperands(I);
2101 
2102   // Canonicalize negative constants out of expressions.
2103   if (Instruction *Res = canonicalizeNegFPConstants(I))
2104     I = Res;
2105 
2106   // Don't optimize floating-point instructions unless they are 'fast'.
2107   if (I->getType()->isFPOrFPVectorTy() && !I->isFast())
2108     return;
2109 
2110   // Do not reassociate boolean (i1) expressions.  We want to preserve the
2111   // original order of evaluation for short-circuited comparisons that
2112   // SimplifyCFG has folded to AND/OR expressions.  If the expression
2113   // is not further optimized, it is likely to be transformed back to a
2114   // short-circuited form for code gen, and the source order may have been
2115   // optimized for the most likely conditions.
2116   if (I->getType()->isIntegerTy(1))
2117     return;
2118 
2119   // If this is a subtract instruction which is not already in negate form,
2120   // see if we can convert it to X+-Y.
2121   if (I->getOpcode() == Instruction::Sub) {
2122     if (ShouldBreakUpSubtract(I)) {
2123       Instruction *NI = BreakUpSubtract(I, RedoInsts);
2124       RedoInsts.insert(I);
2125       MadeChange = true;
2126       I = NI;
2127     } else if (match(I, m_Neg(m_Value()))) {
2128       // Otherwise, this is a negation.  See if the operand is a multiply tree
2129       // and if this is not an inner node of a multiply tree.
2130       if (isReassociableOp(I->getOperand(1), Instruction::Mul) &&
2131           (!I->hasOneUse() ||
2132            !isReassociableOp(I->user_back(), Instruction::Mul))) {
2133         Instruction *NI = LowerNegateToMultiply(I);
2134         // If the negate was simplified, revisit the users to see if we can
2135         // reassociate further.
2136         for (User *U : NI->users()) {
2137           if (BinaryOperator *Tmp = dyn_cast<BinaryOperator>(U))
2138             RedoInsts.insert(Tmp);
2139         }
2140         RedoInsts.insert(I);
2141         MadeChange = true;
2142         I = NI;
2143       }
2144     }
2145   } else if (I->getOpcode() == Instruction::FNeg ||
2146              I->getOpcode() == Instruction::FSub) {
2147     if (ShouldBreakUpSubtract(I)) {
2148       Instruction *NI = BreakUpSubtract(I, RedoInsts);
2149       RedoInsts.insert(I);
2150       MadeChange = true;
2151       I = NI;
2152     } else if (match(I, m_FNeg(m_Value()))) {
2153       // Otherwise, this is a negation.  See if the operand is a multiply tree
2154       // and if this is not an inner node of a multiply tree.
2155       Value *Op = isa<BinaryOperator>(I) ? I->getOperand(1) :
2156                                            I->getOperand(0);
2157       if (isReassociableOp(Op, Instruction::FMul) &&
2158           (!I->hasOneUse() ||
2159            !isReassociableOp(I->user_back(), Instruction::FMul))) {
2160         // If the negate was simplified, revisit the users to see if we can
2161         // reassociate further.
2162         Instruction *NI = LowerNegateToMultiply(I);
2163         for (User *U : NI->users()) {
2164           if (BinaryOperator *Tmp = dyn_cast<BinaryOperator>(U))
2165             RedoInsts.insert(Tmp);
2166         }
2167         RedoInsts.insert(I);
2168         MadeChange = true;
2169         I = NI;
2170       }
2171     }
2172   }
2173 
2174   // If this instruction is an associative binary operator, process it.
2175   if (!I->isAssociative()) return;
2176   BinaryOperator *BO = cast<BinaryOperator>(I);
2177 
2178   // If this is an interior node of a reassociable tree, ignore it until we
2179   // get to the root of the tree, to avoid N^2 analysis.
2180   unsigned Opcode = BO->getOpcode();
2181   if (BO->hasOneUse() && BO->user_back()->getOpcode() == Opcode) {
2182     // During the initial run we will get to the root of the tree.
2183     // But if we get here while we are redoing instructions, there is no
2184     // guarantee that the root will be visited. So Redo later
2185     if (BO->user_back() != BO &&
2186         BO->getParent() == BO->user_back()->getParent())
2187       RedoInsts.insert(BO->user_back());
2188     return;
2189   }
2190 
2191   // If this is an add tree that is used by a sub instruction, ignore it
2192   // until we process the subtract.
2193   if (BO->hasOneUse() && BO->getOpcode() == Instruction::Add &&
2194       cast<Instruction>(BO->user_back())->getOpcode() == Instruction::Sub)
2195     return;
2196   if (BO->hasOneUse() && BO->getOpcode() == Instruction::FAdd &&
2197       cast<Instruction>(BO->user_back())->getOpcode() == Instruction::FSub)
2198     return;
2199 
2200   ReassociateExpression(BO);
2201 }
2202 
2203 void ReassociatePass::ReassociateExpression(BinaryOperator *I) {
2204   // First, walk the expression tree, linearizing the tree, collecting the
2205   // operand information.
2206   SmallVector<RepeatedValue, 8> Tree;
2207   MadeChange |= LinearizeExprTree(I, Tree);
2208   SmallVector<ValueEntry, 8> Ops;
2209   Ops.reserve(Tree.size());
2210   for (unsigned i = 0, e = Tree.size(); i != e; ++i) {
2211     RepeatedValue E = Tree[i];
2212     Ops.append(E.second.getZExtValue(),
2213                ValueEntry(getRank(E.first), E.first));
2214   }
2215 
2216   LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << "RAIn:\t"; PrintOps(I, Ops); dbgs() << '\n');
2217 
2218   // Now that we have linearized the tree to a list and have gathered all of
2219   // the operands and their ranks, sort the operands by their rank.  Use a
2220   // stable_sort so that values with equal ranks will have their relative
2221   // positions maintained (and so the compiler is deterministic).  Note that
2222   // this sorts so that the highest ranking values end up at the beginning of
2223   // the vector.
2224   llvm::stable_sort(Ops);
2225 
2226   // Now that we have the expression tree in a convenient
2227   // sorted form, optimize it globally if possible.
2228   if (Value *V = OptimizeExpression(I, Ops)) {
2229     if (V == I)
2230       // Self-referential expression in unreachable code.
2231       return;
2232     // This expression tree simplified to something that isn't a tree,
2233     // eliminate it.
2234     LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << "Reassoc to scalar: " << *V << '\n');
2235     I->replaceAllUsesWith(V);
2236     if (Instruction *VI = dyn_cast<Instruction>(V))
2237       if (I->getDebugLoc())
2238         VI->setDebugLoc(I->getDebugLoc());
2239     RedoInsts.insert(I);
2240     ++NumAnnihil;
2241     return;
2242   }
2243 
2244   // We want to sink immediates as deeply as possible except in the case where
2245   // this is a multiply tree used only by an add, and the immediate is a -1.
2246   // In this case we reassociate to put the negation on the outside so that we
2247   // can fold the negation into the add: (-X)*Y + Z -> Z-X*Y
2248   if (I->hasOneUse()) {
2249     if (I->getOpcode() == Instruction::Mul &&
2250         cast<Instruction>(I->user_back())->getOpcode() == Instruction::Add &&
2251         isa<ConstantInt>(Ops.back().Op) &&
2252         cast<ConstantInt>(Ops.back().Op)->isMinusOne()) {
2253       ValueEntry Tmp = Ops.pop_back_val();
2254       Ops.insert(Ops.begin(), Tmp);
2255     } else if (I->getOpcode() == Instruction::FMul &&
2256                cast<Instruction>(I->user_back())->getOpcode() ==
2257                    Instruction::FAdd &&
2258                isa<ConstantFP>(Ops.back().Op) &&
2259                cast<ConstantFP>(Ops.back().Op)->isExactlyValue(-1.0)) {
2260       ValueEntry Tmp = Ops.pop_back_val();
2261       Ops.insert(Ops.begin(), Tmp);
2262     }
2263   }
2264 
2265   LLVM_DEBUG(dbgs() << "RAOut:\t"; PrintOps(I, Ops); dbgs() << '\n');
2266 
2267   if (Ops.size() == 1) {
2268     if (Ops[0].Op == I)
2269       // Self-referential expression in unreachable code.
2270       return;
2271 
2272     // This expression tree simplified to something that isn't a tree,
2273     // eliminate it.
2274     I->replaceAllUsesWith(Ops[0].Op);
2275     if (Instruction *OI = dyn_cast<Instruction>(Ops[0].Op))
2276       OI->setDebugLoc(I->getDebugLoc());
2277     RedoInsts.insert(I);
2278     return;
2279   }
2280 
2281   if (Ops.size() > 2 && Ops.size() <= GlobalReassociateLimit) {
2282     // Find the pair with the highest count in the pairmap and move it to the
2283     // back of the list so that it can later be CSE'd.
2284     // example:
2285     //   a*b*c*d*e
2286     // if c*e is the most "popular" pair, we can express this as
2287     //   (((c*e)*d)*b)*a
2288     unsigned Max = 1;
2289     unsigned BestRank = 0;
2290     std::pair<unsigned, unsigned> BestPair;
2291     unsigned Idx = I->getOpcode() - Instruction::BinaryOpsBegin;
2292     for (unsigned i = 0; i < Ops.size() - 1; ++i)
2293       for (unsigned j = i + 1; j < Ops.size(); ++j) {
2294         unsigned Score = 0;
2295         Value *Op0 = Ops[i].Op;
2296         Value *Op1 = Ops[j].Op;
2297         if (std::less<Value *>()(Op1, Op0))
2298           std::swap(Op0, Op1);
2299         auto it = PairMap[Idx].find({Op0, Op1});
2300         if (it != PairMap[Idx].end()) {
2301           // Functions like BreakUpSubtract() can erase the Values we're using
2302           // as keys and create new Values after we built the PairMap. There's a
2303           // small chance that the new nodes can have the same address as
2304           // something already in the table. We shouldn't accumulate the stored
2305           // score in that case as it refers to the wrong Value.
2306           if (it->second.isValid())
2307             Score += it->second.Score;
2308         }
2309 
2310         unsigned MaxRank = std::max(Ops[i].Rank, Ops[j].Rank);
2311         if (Score > Max || (Score == Max && MaxRank < BestRank)) {
2312           BestPair = {i, j};
2313           Max = Score;
2314           BestRank = MaxRank;
2315         }
2316       }
2317     if (Max > 1) {
2318       auto Op0 = Ops[BestPair.first];
2319       auto Op1 = Ops[BestPair.second];
2320       Ops.erase(&Ops[BestPair.second]);
2321       Ops.erase(&Ops[BestPair.first]);
2322       Ops.push_back(Op0);
2323       Ops.push_back(Op1);
2324     }
2325   }
2326   // Now that we ordered and optimized the expressions, splat them back into
2327   // the expression tree, removing any unneeded nodes.
2328   RewriteExprTree(I, Ops);
2329 }
2330 
2331 void
2332 ReassociatePass::BuildPairMap(ReversePostOrderTraversal<Function *> &RPOT) {
2333   // Make a "pairmap" of how often each operand pair occurs.
2334   for (BasicBlock *BI : RPOT) {
2335     for (Instruction &I : *BI) {
2336       if (!I.isAssociative())
2337         continue;
2338 
2339       // Ignore nodes that aren't at the root of trees.
2340       if (I.hasOneUse() && I.user_back()->getOpcode() == I.getOpcode())
2341         continue;
2342 
2343       // Collect all operands in a single reassociable expression.
2344       // Since Reassociate has already been run once, we can assume things
2345       // are already canonical according to Reassociation's regime.
2346       SmallVector<Value *, 8> Worklist = { I.getOperand(0), I.getOperand(1) };
2347       SmallVector<Value *, 8> Ops;
2348       while (!Worklist.empty() && Ops.size() <= GlobalReassociateLimit) {
2349         Value *Op = Worklist.pop_back_val();
2350         Instruction *OpI = dyn_cast<Instruction>(Op);
2351         if (!OpI || OpI->getOpcode() != I.getOpcode() || !OpI->hasOneUse()) {
2352           Ops.push_back(Op);
2353           continue;
2354         }
2355         // Be paranoid about self-referencing expressions in unreachable code.
2356         if (OpI->getOperand(0) != OpI)
2357           Worklist.push_back(OpI->getOperand(0));
2358         if (OpI->getOperand(1) != OpI)
2359           Worklist.push_back(OpI->getOperand(1));
2360       }
2361       // Skip extremely long expressions.
2362       if (Ops.size() > GlobalReassociateLimit)
2363         continue;
2364 
2365       // Add all pairwise combinations of operands to the pair map.
2366       unsigned BinaryIdx = I.getOpcode() - Instruction::BinaryOpsBegin;
2367       SmallSet<std::pair<Value *, Value*>, 32> Visited;
2368       for (unsigned i = 0; i < Ops.size() - 1; ++i) {
2369         for (unsigned j = i + 1; j < Ops.size(); ++j) {
2370           // Canonicalize operand orderings.
2371           Value *Op0 = Ops[i];
2372           Value *Op1 = Ops[j];
2373           if (std::less<Value *>()(Op1, Op0))
2374             std::swap(Op0, Op1);
2375           if (!Visited.insert({Op0, Op1}).second)
2376             continue;
2377           auto res = PairMap[BinaryIdx].insert({{Op0, Op1}, {Op0, Op1, 1}});
2378           if (!res.second) {
2379             // If either key value has been erased then we've got the same
2380             // address by coincidence. That can't happen here because nothing is
2381             // erasing values but it can happen by the time we're querying the
2382             // map.
2383             assert(res.first->second.isValid() && "WeakVH invalidated");
2384             ++res.first->second.Score;
2385           }
2386         }
2387       }
2388     }
2389   }
2390 }
2391 
2392 PreservedAnalyses ReassociatePass::run(Function &F, FunctionAnalysisManager &) {
2393   // Get the functions basic blocks in Reverse Post Order. This order is used by
2394   // BuildRankMap to pre calculate ranks correctly. It also excludes dead basic
2395   // blocks (it has been seen that the analysis in this pass could hang when
2396   // analysing dead basic blocks).
2397   ReversePostOrderTraversal<Function *> RPOT(&F);
2398 
2399   // Calculate the rank map for F.
2400   BuildRankMap(F, RPOT);
2401 
2402   // Build the pair map before running reassociate.
2403   // Technically this would be more accurate if we did it after one round
2404   // of reassociation, but in practice it doesn't seem to help much on
2405   // real-world code, so don't waste the compile time running reassociate
2406   // twice.
2407   // If a user wants, they could expicitly run reassociate twice in their
2408   // pass pipeline for further potential gains.
2409   // It might also be possible to update the pair map during runtime, but the
2410   // overhead of that may be large if there's many reassociable chains.
2411   BuildPairMap(RPOT);
2412 
2413   MadeChange = false;
2414 
2415   // Traverse the same blocks that were analysed by BuildRankMap.
2416   for (BasicBlock *BI : RPOT) {
2417     assert(RankMap.count(&*BI) && "BB should be ranked.");
2418     // Optimize every instruction in the basic block.
2419     for (BasicBlock::iterator II = BI->begin(), IE = BI->end(); II != IE;)
2420       if (isInstructionTriviallyDead(&*II)) {
2421         EraseInst(&*II++);
2422       } else {
2423         OptimizeInst(&*II);
2424         assert(II->getParent() == &*BI && "Moved to a different block!");
2425         ++II;
2426       }
2427 
2428     // Make a copy of all the instructions to be redone so we can remove dead
2429     // instructions.
2430     OrderedSet ToRedo(RedoInsts);
2431     // Iterate over all instructions to be reevaluated and remove trivially dead
2432     // instructions. If any operand of the trivially dead instruction becomes
2433     // dead mark it for deletion as well. Continue this process until all
2434     // trivially dead instructions have been removed.
2435     while (!ToRedo.empty()) {
2436       Instruction *I = ToRedo.pop_back_val();
2437       if (isInstructionTriviallyDead(I)) {
2438         RecursivelyEraseDeadInsts(I, ToRedo);
2439         MadeChange = true;
2440       }
2441     }
2442 
2443     // Now that we have removed dead instructions, we can reoptimize the
2444     // remaining instructions.
2445     while (!RedoInsts.empty()) {
2446       Instruction *I = RedoInsts.front();
2447       RedoInsts.erase(RedoInsts.begin());
2448       if (isInstructionTriviallyDead(I))
2449         EraseInst(I);
2450       else
2451         OptimizeInst(I);
2452     }
2453   }
2454 
2455   // We are done with the rank map and pair map.
2456   RankMap.clear();
2457   ValueRankMap.clear();
2458   for (auto &Entry : PairMap)
2459     Entry.clear();
2460 
2461   if (MadeChange) {
2462     PreservedAnalyses PA;
2463     PA.preserveSet<CFGAnalyses>();
2464     PA.preserve<AAManager>();
2465     PA.preserve<BasicAA>();
2466     PA.preserve<GlobalsAA>();
2467     return PA;
2468   }
2469 
2470   return PreservedAnalyses::all();
2471 }
2472 
2473 namespace {
2474 
2475   class ReassociateLegacyPass : public FunctionPass {
2476     ReassociatePass Impl;
2477 
2478   public:
2479     static char ID; // Pass identification, replacement for typeid
2480 
2481     ReassociateLegacyPass() : FunctionPass(ID) {
2482       initializeReassociateLegacyPassPass(*PassRegistry::getPassRegistry());
2483     }
2484 
2485     bool runOnFunction(Function &F) override {
2486       if (skipFunction(F))
2487         return false;
2488 
2489       FunctionAnalysisManager DummyFAM;
2490       auto PA = Impl.run(F, DummyFAM);
2491       return !PA.areAllPreserved();
2492     }
2493 
2494     void getAnalysisUsage(AnalysisUsage &AU) const override {
2495       AU.setPreservesCFG();
2496       AU.addPreserved<AAResultsWrapperPass>();
2497       AU.addPreserved<BasicAAWrapperPass>();
2498       AU.addPreserved<GlobalsAAWrapperPass>();
2499     }
2500   };
2501 
2502 } // end anonymous namespace
2503 
2504 char ReassociateLegacyPass::ID = 0;
2505 
2506 INITIALIZE_PASS(ReassociateLegacyPass, "reassociate",
2507                 "Reassociate expressions", false, false)
2508 
2509 // Public interface to the Reassociate pass
2510 FunctionPass *llvm::createReassociatePass() {
2511   return new ReassociateLegacyPass();
2512 }
2513