bool AAResults::invalidate(Function &F, const PreservedAnalyses &PA, FunctionAnalysisManager::Invalidator &Inv) { // AAResults preserves the AAManager by default, due to the stateless nature // of AliasAnalysis. There is no need to check whether it has been preserved // explicitly. Check if any module dependency was invalidated and caused the // AAManager to be invalidated. Invalidate ourselves in that case. auto PAC = PA.getChecker<AAManager>(); if (!PAC.preservedWhenStateless()) return true; // Check if any of the function dependencies were invalidated, and invalidate // ourselves in that case. for (AnalysisKey *ID : AADeps) if (Inv.invalidate(ID, F, PA)) return true; // Everything we depend on is still fine, so are we. Nothing to invalidate. return false; }
bool LoopAnalysisManagerFunctionProxy::Result::invalidate( Function &F, const PreservedAnalyses &PA, FunctionAnalysisManager::Invalidator &Inv) { // First compute the sequence of IR units covered by this proxy. We will want // to visit this in postorder, but because this is a tree structure we can do // this by building a preorder sequence and walking it in reverse. SmallVector<Loop *, 4> PreOrderLoops, PreOrderWorklist; // Note that we want to walk the roots in reverse order because we will end // up reversing the preorder sequence. However, it happens that the loop nest // roots are in reverse order within the LoopInfo object. So we just walk // forward here. // FIXME: If we change the order of LoopInfo we will want to add a reverse // here. for (Loop *RootL : *LI) { assert(PreOrderWorklist.empty() && "Must start with an empty preorder walk worklist."); PreOrderWorklist.push_back(RootL); do { Loop *L = PreOrderWorklist.pop_back_val(); PreOrderWorklist.append(L->begin(), L->end()); PreOrderLoops.push_back(L); } while (!PreOrderWorklist.empty()); } // If this proxy or the loop info is going to be invalidated, we also need // to clear all the keys coming from that analysis. We also completely blow // away the loop analyses if any of the standard analyses provided by the // loop pass manager go away so that loop analyses can freely use these // without worrying about declaring dependencies on them etc. // FIXME: It isn't clear if this is the right tradeoff. We could instead make // loop analyses declare any dependencies on these and use the more general // invalidation logic below to act on that. auto PAC = PA.getChecker<LoopAnalysisManagerFunctionProxy>(); if (!(PAC.preserved() || PAC.preservedSet<AllAnalysesOn<Function>>()) || Inv.invalidate<AAManager>(F, PA) || Inv.invalidate<AssumptionAnalysis>(F, PA) || Inv.invalidate<DominatorTreeAnalysis>(F, PA) || Inv.invalidate<LoopAnalysis>(F, PA) || Inv.invalidate<ScalarEvolutionAnalysis>(F, PA)) { // Note that the LoopInfo may be stale at this point, however the loop // objects themselves remain the only viable keys that could be in the // analysis manager's cache. So we just walk the keys and forcibly clear // those results. Note that the order doesn't matter here as this will just // directly destroy the results without calling methods on them. for (Loop *L : PreOrderLoops) InnerAM->clear(*L); // We also need to null out the inner AM so that when the object gets // destroyed as invalid we don't try to clear the inner AM again. At that // point we won't be able to reliably walk the loops for this function and // only clear results associated with those loops the way we do here. // FIXME: Making InnerAM null at this point isn't very nice. Most analyses // try to remain valid during invalidation. Maybe we should add an // `IsClean` flag? InnerAM = nullptr; // Now return true to indicate this *is* invalid and a fresh proxy result // needs to be built. This is especially important given the null InnerAM. return true; } // Directly check if the relevant set is preserved so we can short circuit // invalidating loops. bool AreLoopAnalysesPreserved = PA.allAnalysesInSetPreserved<AllAnalysesOn<Loop>>(); // Since we have a valid LoopInfo we can actually leave the cached results in // the analysis manager associated with the Loop keys, but we need to // propagate any necessary invalidation logic into them. We'd like to // invalidate things in roughly the same order as they were put into the // cache and so we walk the preorder list in reverse to form a valid // postorder. for (Loop *L : reverse(PreOrderLoops)) { Optional<PreservedAnalyses> InnerPA; // Check to see whether the preserved set needs to be adjusted based on // function-level analysis invalidation triggering deferred invalidation // for this loop. if (auto *OuterProxy = InnerAM->getCachedResult<FunctionAnalysisManagerLoopProxy>(*L)) for (const auto &OuterInvalidationPair : OuterProxy->getOuterInvalidations()) { AnalysisKey *OuterAnalysisID = OuterInvalidationPair.first; const auto &InnerAnalysisIDs = OuterInvalidationPair.second; if (Inv.invalidate(OuterAnalysisID, F, PA)) { if (!InnerPA) InnerPA = PA; for (AnalysisKey *InnerAnalysisID : InnerAnalysisIDs) InnerPA->abandon(InnerAnalysisID); } } // Check if we needed a custom PA set. If so we'll need to run the inner // invalidation. if (InnerPA) { InnerAM->invalidate(*L, *InnerPA); continue; } // Otherwise we only need to do invalidation if the original PA set didn't // preserve all Loop analyses. if (!AreLoopAnalysesPreserved) InnerAM->invalidate(*L, PA); } // Return false to indicate that this result is still a valid proxy. return false; }