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omp.private (#124019)
The intention of this work is to give MLIR->LLVMIR conversion freedom to
control how the private variable is allocated so that it can be
allocated on the stack in ordinary cases or as part of a structure used
to give closure context for tasks which might outlive the current stack
frame. See RFC:
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-openmp-supporting-delayed-task-execution-with-firstprivate-variables/83084
For example, a privatizer for an integer used to look like
```mlir
omp.private {type = private} @x.privatizer : !fir.ref<i32> alloc {
^bb0(%arg0: !fir.ref<i32>):
%0 = ... allocate proper memory for the private clone ...
omp.yield(%0 : !fir.ref<i32>)
}
```
After this change, allocation become implicit in the operation:
```mlir
omp.private {type = private} @x.privatizer : i32
```
For more complex types that require initialization after allocation, an
init region can be used:
``` mlir
omp.private {type = private} @x.privatizer : !some.type init {
^bb0(%arg0: !some.pointer<!some.type>, %arg1: !some.pointer<!some.type>):
// initialize %arg1, using %arg0 as a mold for allocations
omp.yield(%arg1 : !some.pointer<!some.type>)
} dealloc {
^bb0(%arg0: !some.pointer<!some.type>):
... deallocate memory allocated by the init region ...
omp.yield
}
```
This patch lays the groundwork for delayed task execution but is not
enough on its own.
After this patch all gfortran tests which previously passed still pass.
There
are the following changes to the Fujitsu test suite:
- 0380_0009 and 0435_0009 are fixed
- 0688_0041 now fails at runtime. This patch is testing firstprivate
variables with tasks. Previously we got lucky with the undefined
behavior and won the race. After these changes we no longer get lucky.
This patch lays the groundwork for a proper fix for this issue.
In flang the lowering re-uses the existing lowering used for reduction
init and dealloc regions.
In flang, before this patch we hit a TODO with the same wording when
generating the copy region for firstprivate polymorphic variables. After
this patch the box-like fir.class is passed by reference into the copy
region, leading to a different path that didn't hit that old TODO but
the generated code still didn't work so I added a new TODO in
DataSharingProcessor.
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This commit marks the type converter in `populate...` functions as
`const`. This is useful for debugging.
Patterns already take a `const` type converter. However, some
`populate...` functions do not only add new patterns, but also add
additional type conversion rules. That makes it difficult to find the
place where a type conversion was added in the code base. With this
change, all `populate...` functions that only populate pattern now have
a `const` type converter. Programmers can then conclude from the
function signature that these functions do not register any new type
conversion rules.
Also some minor cleanups around the 1:N dialect conversion
infrastructure, which did not always pass the type converter as a
`const` object internally.
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This patch is part of a project to move the Presburger library into
LLVM.
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target devices (#71766)
This patch seeks to add an initial lowering for pointers and allocatable variables
captured by implicit and explicit map in Flang OpenMP for Target operations that
take map clauses e.g. Target, Target Update. Target Exit/Enter etc.
Currently this is done by treating the type that lowers to a descriptor
(allocatable/pointer/assumed shape) as a map of a record type (e.g. a structure) as that's
effectively what descriptor types lower to in LLVM-IR and what they're represented as
in the Fortran runtime (written in C/C++). The descriptor effectively lowers to a structure
containing scalar and array elements that represent various aspects of the underlying
data being mapped (lower bound, upper bound, extent being the main ones of interest
in most cases) and a pointer to the allocated data. In this current iteration of the mapping
we map the structure in it's entirety and then attach the underlying data pointer and map
the data to the device, this allows most of the required data to be resident on the device
for use. Currently we do not support the addendum (another block of pointer data), but
it shouldn't be too difficult to extend this to support it.
The MapInfoOp generation for descriptor types is primarily handled in an optimization
pass, where it expands BoxType (descriptor types) map captures into two maps, one for
the structure (scalar elements) and the other for the pointer data (base address) and
links them in a Parent <-> Child relationship. The later lowering processes will then treat
them as a conjoined structure with a pointer member map.
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