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[compiler] Separate InferFunctionEffects pass from InferReferenceEffects #30975
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Test Plan: This diff finally separates InferFunctionEffects into its own separate pass from InferReferenceEffects. It relies on the abstractValues populated in IRE as well as the alias sets that IRE returns. The meat of the InferFunctionEffects algorithm is still the same, but rather than querying the "live" InferenceState from IRE for abstract values and alias information, we query the values defined on places and the alias set returned by IRE. One extra bit of work that we now need to perform is creating a map from IdentifierIds to AbstractValues, which we do by traversing the HIRFunction and examining all places. We also need to track the computed effects of nested functions, and that's where the disjoint set of aliases comes in -- when performing the main algorithm, we might see a set of instructions like ``` $0 = Function (effect=ContextMutation) { ... } $1 = LoadLocal $0 $2 = Call $1 () ``` When examining the `Call` instruction, we need to know that $1 has the function effect [ContextMutation]. Since $0 and $1 were inferred to be aliased by IRE, we don't need to do any other propagation from $0 to $1 if we track the nested effects based on the root of the alias set { $0, $1 } rather than the specific identifier $1 present in the Call instruction. [ghstack-poisoned]
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This was referenced Sep 16, 2024
…ferenceEffects" Test Plan: This diff finally separates InferFunctionEffects into its own separate pass from InferReferenceEffects. It relies on the abstractValues populated in IRE as well as the alias sets that IRE returns. The meat of the InferFunctionEffects algorithm is still the same, but rather than querying the "live" InferenceState from IRE for abstract values and alias information, we query the values defined on places and the alias set returned by IRE. One extra bit of work that we now need to perform is creating a map from IdentifierIds to AbstractValues, which we do by traversing the HIRFunction and examining all places. We also need to track the computed effects of nested functions, and that's where the disjoint set of aliases comes in -- when performing the main algorithm, we might see a set of instructions like ``` $0 = Function (effect=ContextMutation) { ... } $1 = LoadLocal $0 $2 = Call $1 () ``` When examining the `Call` instruction, we need to know that $1 has the function effect [ContextMutation]. Since $0 and $1 were inferred to be aliased by IRE, we don't need to do any other propagation from $0 to $1 if we track the nested effects based on the root of the alias set { $0, $1 } rather than the specific identifier $1 present in the Call instruction. [ghstack-poisoned]
(currently testing this internally -- will move out of draft mode if internal results look good) |
…ferenceEffects" Test Plan: This diff finally separates InferFunctionEffects into its own separate pass from InferReferenceEffects. It relies on the abstractValues populated in IRE as well as the alias sets that IRE returns. The meat of the InferFunctionEffects algorithm is still the same, but rather than querying the "live" InferenceState from IRE for abstract values and alias information, we query the values defined on places and the alias set returned by IRE. One extra bit of work that we now need to perform is creating a map from IdentifierIds to AbstractValues, which we do by traversing the HIRFunction and examining all places. We also need to track the computed effects of nested functions, and that's where the disjoint set of aliases comes in -- when performing the main algorithm, we might see a set of instructions like ``` $0 = Function (effect=ContextMutation) { ... } $1 = LoadLocal $0 $2 = Call $1 () ``` When examining the `Call` instruction, we need to know that $1 has the function effect [ContextMutation]. Since $0 and $1 were inferred to be aliased by IRE, we don't need to do any other propagation from $0 to $1 if we track the nested effects based on the root of the alias set { $0, $1 } rather than the specific identifier $1 present in the Call instruction. [ghstack-poisoned]
…ferenceEffects" Test Plan: This diff finally separates InferFunctionEffects into its own separate pass from InferReferenceEffects. It relies on the abstractValues populated in IRE as well as the alias sets that IRE returns. The meat of the InferFunctionEffects algorithm is still the same, but rather than querying the "live" InferenceState from IRE for abstract values and alias information, we query the values defined on places and the alias set returned by IRE. One extra bit of work that we now need to perform is creating a map from IdentifierIds to AbstractValues, which we do by traversing the HIRFunction and examining all places. We also need to track the computed effects of nested functions, and that's where the disjoint set of aliases comes in -- when performing the main algorithm, we might see a set of instructions like ``` $0 = Function (effect=ContextMutation) { ... } $1 = LoadLocal $0 $2 = Call $1 () ``` When examining the `Call` instruction, we need to know that $1 has the function effect [ContextMutation]. Since $0 and $1 were inferred to be aliased by IRE, we don't need to do any other propagation from $0 to $1 if we track the nested effects based on the root of the alias set { $0, $1 } rather than the specific identifier $1 present in the Call instruction. [ghstack-poisoned]
…ferenceEffects" Test Plan: This diff finally separates InferFunctionEffects into its own separate pass from InferReferenceEffects. It relies on the abstractValues populated in IRE as well as the alias sets that IRE returns. The meat of the InferFunctionEffects algorithm is still the same, but rather than querying the "live" InferenceState from IRE for abstract values and alias information, we query the values defined on places and the alias set returned by IRE. One extra bit of work that we now need to perform is creating a map from IdentifierIds to AbstractValues, which we do by traversing the HIRFunction and examining all places. We also need to track the computed effects of nested functions, and that's where the disjoint set of aliases comes in -- when performing the main algorithm, we might see a set of instructions like ``` $0 = Function (effect=ContextMutation) { ... } $1 = LoadLocal $0 $2 = Call $1 () ``` When examining the `Call` instruction, we need to know that $1 has the function effect [ContextMutation]. Since $0 and $1 were inferred to be aliased by IRE, we don't need to do any other propagation from $0 to $1 if we track the nested effects based on the root of the alias set { $0, $1 } rather than the specific identifier $1 present in the Call instruction. [ghstack-poisoned]
P1592845685 for the internal sync. No changes to the function effect errors. |
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Stack from ghstack (oldest at bottom):
Test Plan:
This diff finally separates InferFunctionEffects into its own separate pass from InferReferenceEffects. It relies on the abstractValues populated in IRE as well as the alias sets that IRE returns.
The meat of the InferFunctionEffects algorithm is still the same, but rather than querying the "live" InferenceState from IRE for abstract values and alias information, we query the values defined on places and the alias set returned by IRE.
One extra bit of work that we now need to perform is creating a map from IdentifierIds to AbstractValues, which we do by traversing the HIRFunction and examining all places. We also need to track the computed effects of nested functions, and that's where the disjoint set of aliases comes in -- when performing the main algorithm, we might see a set of instructions like
When examining the
Call
instruction, we need to know that $1 has the function effect [ContextMutation]. Since $0 and $1 were inferred to be aliased by IRE, we don't need to do any other propagation from $0 to $1 if we track the nested effects based on the root of the alias set { $0, $1 } rather than the specific identifier $1 present in the Call instruction.