clang 20.0.0 (based on r547379) from build 12806354. Bug: http://b/379133546 Test: N/A Change-Id: I2eb8938af55d809de674be63cb30cf27e801862b Upstream-Commit: ad834e67b1105d15ef907f6255d4c96e8e733f57
647 lines
27 KiB
C++
647 lines
27 KiB
C++
//===------ ISLTools.h ------------------------------------------*- C++ -*-===//
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//
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// Part of the LLVM Project, under the Apache License v2.0 with LLVM Exceptions.
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// See https://llvm.org/LICENSE.txt for license information.
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// SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 WITH LLVM-exception
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//
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//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
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//
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// Tools, utilities, helpers and extensions useful in conjunction with the
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// Integer Set Library (isl).
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//
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//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
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#ifndef POLLY_ISLTOOLS_H
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#define POLLY_ISLTOOLS_H
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#include "llvm/ADT/Sequence.h"
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#include "llvm/ADT/iterator.h"
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#include "isl/isl-noexceptions.h"
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#include <algorithm>
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#include <cassert>
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/// In debug builds assert that the @p Size is valid, in non-debug builds
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/// disable the mandatory state checking but do not enforce the error checking.
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inline void islAssert(const isl::size &Size) {
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#ifdef NDEBUG
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// Calling is_error() marks that the error status has been checked which
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// disables the error-status-not-checked errors that would otherwise occur
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// when using the value.
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(void)Size.is_error();
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#else
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// Assert on error in debug builds.
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assert(!Size.is_error());
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#endif
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}
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/// Check that @p Size is valid (only on debug builds) and cast it to unsigned.
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/// Cast the @p Size to unsigned. If the @p Size is not valid (Size.is_error()
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/// == true) then an assert and an abort are triggered.
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inline unsigned unsignedFromIslSize(const isl::size &Size) {
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islAssert(Size);
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return static_cast<unsigned>(Size);
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}
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namespace isl {
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inline namespace noexceptions {
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template <typename ListT>
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using list_element_type = decltype(std::declval<ListT>().get_at(0));
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template <typename ListT>
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class isl_iterator
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: public llvm::iterator_facade_base<isl_iterator<ListT>,
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std::forward_iterator_tag,
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list_element_type<ListT>> {
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public:
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using ElementT = list_element_type<ListT>;
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explicit isl_iterator(const ListT &List)
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: List(&List), Position(std::max(List.size().release(), 0)) {}
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isl_iterator(const ListT &List, int Position)
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: List(&List), Position(Position) {}
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bool operator==(const isl_iterator &O) const {
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return List == O.List && Position == O.Position;
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}
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isl_iterator &operator++() {
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++Position;
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return *this;
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}
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isl_iterator operator++(int) {
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isl_iterator Copy{*this};
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++Position;
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return Copy;
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}
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ElementT operator*() const { return List->get_at(this->Position); }
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protected:
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const ListT *List;
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int Position = 0;
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};
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template <typename T> isl_iterator<T> begin(const T &t) {
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return isl_iterator<T>(t, 0);
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}
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template <typename T> isl_iterator<T> end(const T &t) {
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return isl_iterator<T>(t);
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}
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} // namespace noexceptions
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} // namespace isl
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namespace polly {
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/// Return the range elements that are lexicographically smaller.
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///
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/// @param Map { Space[] -> Scatter[] }
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/// @param Strict True for strictly lexicographically smaller elements (exclude
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/// same timepoints from the result).
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///
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/// @return { Space[] -> Scatter[] }
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/// A map to all timepoints that happen before the timepoints the input
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/// mapped to.
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isl::map beforeScatter(isl::map Map, bool Strict);
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/// Piecewise beforeScatter(isl::map,bool).
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isl::union_map beforeScatter(isl::union_map UMap, bool Strict);
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/// Return the range elements that are lexicographically larger.
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///
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/// @param Map { Space[] -> Scatter[] }
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/// @param Strict True for strictly lexicographically larger elements (exclude
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/// same timepoints from the result).
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///
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/// @return { Space[] -> Scatter[] }
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/// A map to all timepoints that happen after the timepoints the input
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/// map originally mapped to.
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isl::map afterScatter(isl::map Map, bool Strict);
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/// Piecewise afterScatter(isl::map,bool).
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isl::union_map afterScatter(const isl::union_map &UMap, bool Strict);
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/// Construct a range of timepoints between two timepoints.
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///
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/// Example:
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/// From := { A[] -> [0]; B[] -> [0] }
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/// To := { B[] -> [10]; C[] -> [20] }
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///
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/// Result:
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/// { B[] -> [i] : 0 < i < 10 }
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///
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/// Note that A[] and C[] are not in the result because they do not have a start
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/// or end timepoint. If a start (or end) timepoint is not unique, the first
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/// (respectively last) is chosen.
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///
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/// @param From { Space[] -> Scatter[] }
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/// Map to start timepoints.
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/// @param To { Space[] -> Scatter[] }
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/// Map to end timepoints.
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/// @param InclFrom Whether to include the start timepoints in the result. In
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/// the example, this would add { B[] -> [0] }
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/// @param InclTo Whether to include the end timepoints in the result. In this
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/// example, this would add { B[] -> [10] }
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///
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/// @return { Space[] -> Scatter[] }
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/// A map for each domain element of timepoints between two extreme
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/// points, or nullptr if @p From or @p To is nullptr, or the isl max
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/// operations is exceeded.
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isl::map betweenScatter(isl::map From, isl::map To, bool InclFrom, bool InclTo);
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/// Piecewise betweenScatter(isl::map,isl::map,bool,bool).
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isl::union_map betweenScatter(isl::union_map From, isl::union_map To,
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bool InclFrom, bool InclTo);
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/// If by construction a union map is known to contain only a single map, return
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/// it.
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///
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/// This function combines isl_map_from_union_map() and
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/// isl_union_map_extract_map(). isl_map_from_union_map() fails if the map is
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/// empty because it does not know which space it would be in.
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/// isl_union_map_extract_map() on the other hand does not check whether there
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/// is (at most) one isl_map in the union, i.e. how it has been constructed is
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/// probably wrong.
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isl::map singleton(isl::union_map UMap, isl::space ExpectedSpace);
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/// If by construction an isl_union_set is known to contain only a single
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/// isl_set, return it.
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///
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/// This function combines isl_set_from_union_set() and
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/// isl_union_set_extract_set(). isl_map_from_union_set() fails if the set is
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/// empty because it does not know which space it would be in.
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/// isl_union_set_extract_set() on the other hand does not check whether there
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/// is (at most) one isl_set in the union, i.e. how it has been constructed is
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/// probably wrong.
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isl::set singleton(isl::union_set USet, isl::space ExpectedSpace);
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/// Determine how many dimensions the scatter space of @p Schedule has.
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///
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/// The schedule must not be empty and have equal number of dimensions of any
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/// subspace it contains.
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///
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/// The implementation currently returns the maximum number of dimensions it
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/// encounters, if different, and 0 if none is encountered. However, most other
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/// code will most likely fail if one of these happen.
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unsigned getNumScatterDims(const isl::union_map &Schedule);
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/// Return the scatter space of a @p Schedule.
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///
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/// This is basically the range space of the schedule map, but harder to
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/// determine because it is an isl_union_map.
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isl::space getScatterSpace(const isl::union_map &Schedule);
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/// Construct an identity map for the given domain values.
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///
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/// @param USet { Space[] }
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/// The returned map's domain and range.
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/// @param RestrictDomain If true, the returned map only maps elements contained
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/// in @p Set and no other. If false, it returns an
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/// overapproximation with the identity maps of any space
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/// in @p Set, not just the elements in it.
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///
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/// @return { Space[] -> Space[] }
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/// A map that maps each value of @p Set to itself.
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isl::map makeIdentityMap(const isl::set &Set, bool RestrictDomain);
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/// Construct an identity map for the given domain values.
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///
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/// There is no type resembling isl_union_space, hence we have to pass an
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/// isl_union_set as the map's domain and range space.
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///
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/// @param USet { Space[] }
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/// The returned map's domain and range.
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/// @param RestrictDomain If true, the returned map only maps elements contained
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/// in @p USet and no other. If false, it returns an
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/// overapproximation with the identity maps of any space
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/// in @p USet, not just the elements in it.
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///
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/// @return { Space[] -> Space[] }
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/// A map that maps each value of @p USet to itself.
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isl::union_map makeIdentityMap(const isl::union_set &USet, bool RestrictDomain);
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/// Reverse the nested map tuple in @p Map's domain.
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///
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/// @param Map { [Space1[] -> Space2[]] -> Space3[] }
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///
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/// @return { [Space2[] -> Space1[]] -> Space3[] }
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isl::map reverseDomain(isl::map Map);
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/// Piecewise reverseDomain(isl::map).
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isl::union_map reverseDomain(const isl::union_map &UMap);
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/// Add a constant to one dimension of a set.
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///
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/// @param Map The set to shift a dimension in.
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/// @param Pos The dimension to shift. If negative, the dimensions are
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/// counted from the end instead from the beginning. E.g. -1 is
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/// the last dimension in the tuple.
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/// @param Amount The offset to add to the specified dimension.
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///
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/// @return The modified set.
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isl::set shiftDim(isl::set Set, int Pos, int Amount);
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/// Piecewise shiftDim(isl::set,int,int).
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isl::union_set shiftDim(isl::union_set USet, int Pos, int Amount);
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/// Add a constant to one dimension of a map.
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///
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/// @param Map The map to shift a dimension in.
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/// @param Type A tuple of @p Map which contains the dimension to shift.
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/// @param Pos The dimension to shift. If negative, the dimensions are
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/// counted from the end instead from the beginning. Eg. -1 is the last
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/// dimension in the tuple.
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/// @param Amount The offset to add to the specified dimension.
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///
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/// @return The modified map.
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isl::map shiftDim(isl::map Map, isl::dim Dim, int Pos, int Amount);
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/// Add a constant to one dimension of a each map in a union map.
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///
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/// @param UMap The maps to shift a dimension in.
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/// @param Type The tuple which contains the dimension to shift.
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/// @param Pos The dimension to shift. If negative, the dimensions are
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/// counted from the ends of each map of union instead from their
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/// beginning. E.g. -1 is the last dimension of any map.
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/// @param Amount The offset to add to the specified dimension.
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///
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/// @return The union of all modified maps.
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isl::union_map shiftDim(isl::union_map UMap, isl::dim Dim, int Pos, int Amount);
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/// Simplify a set inplace.
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void simplify(isl::set &Set);
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/// Simplify a union set inplace.
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void simplify(isl::union_set &USet);
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/// Simplify a map inplace.
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void simplify(isl::map &Map);
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/// Simplify a union map inplace.
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void simplify(isl::union_map &UMap);
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/// Compute the reaching definition statement or the next overwrite for each
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/// definition of an array element.
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///
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/// The reaching definition of an array element at a specific timepoint is the
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/// statement instance that has written the current element's content.
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/// Alternatively, this function determines for each timepoint and element which
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/// write is going to overwrite an element at a future timepoint. This can be
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/// seen as "reaching definition in reverse" where definitions are found in the
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/// past.
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///
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/// For example:
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///
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/// Schedule := { Write[] -> [0]; Overwrite[] -> [10] }
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/// Defs := { Write[] -> A[5]; Overwrite[] -> A[5] }
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///
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/// If index 5 of array A is written at timepoint 0 and 10, the resulting
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/// reaching definitions are:
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///
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/// { [A[5] -> [i]] -> Write[] : 0 < i < 10;
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/// [A[5] -> [i]] -> Overwrite[] : 10 < i }
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///
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/// Between timepoint 0 (Write[]) and timepoint 10 (Overwrite[]), the
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/// content of A[5] is written by statement instance Write[] and after
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/// timepoint 10 by Overwrite[]. Values not defined in the map have no known
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/// definition. This includes the statement instance timepoints themselves,
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/// because reads at those timepoints could either read the old or the new
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/// value, defined only by the statement itself. But this can be changed by @p
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/// InclPrevDef and @p InclNextDef. InclPrevDef=false and InclNextDef=true
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/// returns a zone. Unless @p InclPrevDef and @p InclNextDef are both true,
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/// there is only one unique definition per element and timepoint.
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///
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/// @param Schedule { DomainWrite[] -> Scatter[] }
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/// Schedule of (at least) all array writes. Instances not in
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/// @p Writes are ignored.
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/// @param Writes { DomainWrite[] -> Element[] }
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/// Elements written to by the statement instances.
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/// @param Reverse If true, look for definitions in the future. That is,
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/// find the write that is overwrites the current value.
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/// @param InclPrevDef Include the definition's timepoint to the set of
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/// well-defined elements (any load at that timepoint happen
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/// at the writes). In the example, enabling this option adds
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/// {[A[5] -> [0]] -> Write[]; [A[5] -> [10]] -> Overwrite[]}
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/// to the result.
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/// @param InclNextDef Whether to assume that at the timepoint where an element
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/// is overwritten, it still contains the old value (any load
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/// at that timepoint would happen before the overwrite). In
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/// this example, enabling this adds
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/// { [A[] -> [10]] -> Write[] } to the result.
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///
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/// @return { [Element[] -> Scatter[]] -> DomainWrite[] }
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/// The reaching definitions or future overwrite as described above, or
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/// nullptr if either @p Schedule or @p Writes is nullptr, or the isl
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/// max operations count has exceeded.
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isl::union_map computeReachingWrite(isl::union_map Schedule,
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isl::union_map Writes, bool Reverse,
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bool InclPrevDef, bool InclNextDef);
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/// Compute the timepoints where the contents of an array element are not used.
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///
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/// An element is unused at a timepoint when the element is overwritten in
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/// the future, but it is not read in between. Another way to express this: the
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/// time from when the element is written, to the most recent read before it, or
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/// infinitely into the past if there is no read before. Such unused elements
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/// can be overwritten by any value without changing the scop's semantics. An
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/// example:
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///
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/// Schedule := { Read[] -> [0]; Write[] -> [10]; Def[] -> [20] }
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/// Writes := { Write[] -> A[5]; Def[] -> A[6] }
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/// Reads := { Read[] -> A[5] }
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///
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/// The result is:
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///
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/// { A[5] -> [i] : 0 < i < 10;
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/// A[6] -> [i] : i < 20 }
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///
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/// That is, A[5] is unused between timepoint 0 (the read) and timepoint 10 (the
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/// write). A[6] is unused before timepoint 20, but might be used after the
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/// scop's execution (A[5] and any other A[i] as well). Use InclLastRead=false
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/// and InclWrite=true to interpret the result as zone.
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///
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/// @param Schedule { Domain[] -> Scatter[] }
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/// The schedule of (at least) all statement instances
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/// occurring in @p Writes or @p Reads. All other
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/// instances are ignored.
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/// @param Writes { DomainWrite[] -> Element[] }
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/// Elements written to by the statement instances.
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/// @param Reads { DomainRead[] -> Element[] }
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/// Elements read from by the statement instances.
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/// @param ReadEltInSameInst Whether a load reads the value from a write
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/// that is scheduled at the same timepoint (Writes
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/// happen before reads). Otherwise, loads use the
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/// value of an element that it had before the
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/// timepoint (Reads before writes). For example:
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/// { Read[] -> [0]; Write[] -> [0] }
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/// With ReadEltInSameInst=false it is assumed that the
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/// read happens before the write, such that the
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/// element is never unused, or just at timepoint 0,
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/// depending on InclLastRead/InclWrite.
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/// With ReadEltInSameInst=false it assumes that the
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/// value just written is used. Anything before
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/// timepoint 0 is considered unused.
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/// @param InclLastRead Whether a timepoint where an element is last read
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/// counts as unused (the read happens at the beginning
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/// of its timepoint, and nothing (else) can use it
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/// during the timepoint). In the example, this option
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/// adds { A[5] -> [0] } to the result.
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/// @param InclWrite Whether the timepoint where an element is written
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/// itself counts as unused (the write happens at the
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/// end of its timepoint; no (other) operations uses
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/// the element during the timepoint). In this example,
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/// this adds
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/// { A[5] -> [10]; A[6] -> [20] } to the result.
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///
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/// @return { Element[] -> Scatter[] }
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/// The unused timepoints as defined above, or nullptr if either @p
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/// Schedule, @p Writes are @p Reads is nullptr, or the ISL max
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/// operations count is exceeded.
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isl::union_map computeArrayUnused(isl::union_map Schedule,
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isl::union_map Writes, isl::union_map Reads,
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bool ReadEltInSameInst, bool InclLastRead,
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bool InclWrite);
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/// Convert a zone (range between timepoints) to timepoints.
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///
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/// A zone represents the time between (integer) timepoints, but not the
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/// timepoints themselves. This function can be used to determine whether a
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/// timepoint lies within a zone.
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///
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/// For instance, the range (1,3), representing the time between 1 and 3, is
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/// represented by the zone
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///
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/// { [i] : 1 < i <= 3 }
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///
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/// The set of timepoints that lie completely within this range is
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///
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/// { [i] : 1 < i < 3 }
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///
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/// A typical use-case is the range in which a value written by a store is
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/// available until it is overwritten by another value. If the write is at
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/// timepoint 1 and its value is overwritten by another value at timepoint 3,
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/// the value is available between those timepoints: timepoint 2 in this
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/// example.
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///
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///
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/// When InclStart is true, the range is interpreted left-inclusive, i.e. adds
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/// the timepoint 1 to the result:
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///
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/// { [i] : 1 <= i < 3 }
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///
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/// In the use-case mentioned above that means that the value written at
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/// timepoint 1 is already available in timepoint 1 (write takes place before
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/// any read of it even if executed at the same timepoint)
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///
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/// When InclEnd is true, the range is interpreted right-inclusive, i.e. adds
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/// the timepoint 3 to the result:
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///
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/// { [i] : 1 < i <= 3 }
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///
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/// In the use-case mentioned above that means that although the value is
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/// overwritten in timepoint 3, the old value is still available at timepoint 3
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/// (write takes place after any read even if executed at the same timepoint)
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///
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/// @param Zone { Zone[] }
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/// @param InclStart Include timepoints adjacent to the beginning of a zone.
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|
/// @param InclEnd Include timepoints adjacent to the ending of a zone.
|
|
///
|
|
/// @return { Scatter[] }
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|
isl::union_set convertZoneToTimepoints(isl::union_set Zone, bool InclStart,
|
|
bool InclEnd);
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|
|
|
/// Like convertZoneToTimepoints(isl::union_set,InclStart,InclEnd), but convert
|
|
/// either the domain or the range of a map.
|
|
isl::union_map convertZoneToTimepoints(isl::union_map Zone, isl::dim Dim,
|
|
bool InclStart, bool InclEnd);
|
|
|
|
/// Overload of convertZoneToTimepoints(isl::map,InclStart,InclEnd) to process
|
|
/// only a single map.
|
|
isl::map convertZoneToTimepoints(isl::map Zone, isl::dim Dim, bool InclStart,
|
|
bool InclEnd);
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|
|
|
/// Distribute the domain to the tuples of a wrapped range map.
|
|
///
|
|
/// @param Map { Domain[] -> [Range1[] -> Range2[]] }
|
|
///
|
|
/// @return { [Domain[] -> Range1[]] -> [Domain[] -> Range2[]] }
|
|
isl::map distributeDomain(isl::map Map);
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|
|
|
/// Apply distributeDomain(isl::map) to each map in the union.
|
|
isl::union_map distributeDomain(isl::union_map UMap);
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|
|
|
/// Prepend a space to the tuples of a map.
|
|
///
|
|
/// @param UMap { Domain[] -> Range[] }
|
|
/// @param Factor { Factor[] }
|
|
///
|
|
/// @return { [Factor[] -> Domain[]] -> [Factor[] -> Range[]] }
|
|
isl::union_map liftDomains(isl::union_map UMap, isl::union_set Factor);
|
|
|
|
/// Apply a map to the 'middle' of another relation.
|
|
///
|
|
/// @param UMap { [DomainDomain[] -> DomainRange[]] -> Range[] }
|
|
/// @param Func { DomainRange[] -> NewDomainRange[] }
|
|
///
|
|
/// @return { [DomainDomain[] -> NewDomainRange[]] -> Range[] }
|
|
isl::union_map applyDomainRange(isl::union_map UMap, isl::union_map Func);
|
|
|
|
/// Intersect the range of @p Map with @p Range.
|
|
///
|
|
/// Since @p Map is an isl::map, the result will be a single space, even though
|
|
/// @p Range is an isl::union_set. This is the only difference to
|
|
/// isl::map::intersect_range and isl::union_map::interset_range.
|
|
///
|
|
/// @param Map { Domain[] -> Range[] }
|
|
/// @param Range { Range[] }
|
|
///
|
|
/// @return { Domain[] -> Range[] }
|
|
isl::map intersectRange(isl::map Map, isl::union_set Range);
|
|
|
|
/// Subtract the parameter space @p Params from @p Map.
|
|
/// This is akin to isl::map::intersect_params.
|
|
///
|
|
/// Example:
|
|
/// subtractParams(
|
|
/// { [i] -> [i] },
|
|
/// [x] -> { : x < 0 }
|
|
/// ) = [x] -> { [i] -> [i] : x >= 0 }
|
|
///
|
|
/// @param Map Remove the conditions of @p Params from this map.
|
|
/// @param Params Parameter set to subtract.
|
|
///
|
|
/// @param The map with the parameter conditions removed.
|
|
isl::map subtractParams(isl::map Map, isl::set Params);
|
|
|
|
/// Subtract the parameter space @p Params from @p Set.
|
|
isl::set subtractParams(isl::set Set, isl::set Params);
|
|
|
|
/// If @p PwAff maps to a constant, return said constant. If @p Max/@p Min, it
|
|
/// can also be a piecewise constant and it would return the minimum/maximum
|
|
/// value. Otherwise, return NaN.
|
|
isl::val getConstant(isl::pw_aff PwAff, bool Max, bool Min);
|
|
|
|
/// If the relation @p PwAff lies on a hyperplane where the given
|
|
/// dimension @p Pos with the type @p Dim has a fixed value, then
|
|
/// return that value. Otherwise return NaN.
|
|
isl::val getConstant(isl::map Map, isl::dim Dim, int Pos);
|
|
|
|
/// Check that @p End is valid and return an iterator from @p Begin to @p End
|
|
///
|
|
/// Use case example:
|
|
/// for (unsigned i : rangeIslSize(0, Map.domain_tuple_dim()))
|
|
/// // do stuff
|
|
llvm::iota_range<unsigned> rangeIslSize(unsigned Begin, isl::size End);
|
|
|
|
/// Dump a description of the argument to llvm::errs().
|
|
///
|
|
/// In contrast to isl's dump function, there are a few differences:
|
|
/// - Each polyhedron (pieces) is written on its own line.
|
|
/// - Spaces are sorted by structure. E.g. maps with same domain space are
|
|
/// grouped. Isl sorts them according to the space's hash function.
|
|
/// - Pieces of the same space are sorted using their lower bound.
|
|
/// - A more compact to_str representation is used instead of Isl's dump
|
|
/// functions that try to show the internal representation.
|
|
///
|
|
/// The goal is to get a better understandable representation that is also
|
|
/// useful to compare two sets. As all dump() functions, its intended use is to
|
|
/// be called in a debugger only.
|
|
///
|
|
/// isl_map_dump example:
|
|
/// [p_0, p_1, p_2] -> { Stmt0[i0] -> [o0, o1] : (o0 = i0 and o1 = 0 and i0 > 0
|
|
/// and i0 <= 5 - p_2) or (i0 = 0 and o0 = 0 and o1 = 0); Stmt3[i0] -> [o0, o1]
|
|
/// : (o0 = i0 and o1 = 3 and i0 > 0 and i0 <= 5 - p_2) or (i0 = 0 and o0 = 0
|
|
/// and o1 = 3); Stmt2[i0] -> [o0, o1] : (o0 = i0 and o1 = 1 and i0 >= 3 + p_0 -
|
|
/// p_1 and i0 > 0 and i0 <= 5 - p_2) or (o0 = i0 and o1 = 1 and i0 > 0 and i0
|
|
/// <= 5 - p_2 and i0 < p_0 - p_1) or (i0 = 0 and o0 = 0 and o1 = 1 and p_1 >= 3
|
|
/// + p_0) or (i0 = 0 and o0 = 0 and o1 = 1 and p_1 < p_0) or (p_0 = 0 and i0 =
|
|
/// 2 - p_1 and o0 = 2 - p_1 and o1 = 1 and p_2 <= 3 + p_1 and p_1 <= 1) or (p_1
|
|
/// = 1 + p_0 and i0 = 0 and o0 = 0 and o1 = 1) or (p_0 = 0 and p_1 = 2 and i0 =
|
|
/// 0 and o0 = 0 and o1 = 1) or (p_0 = -1 and p_1 = -1 and i0 = 0 and o0 = 0 and
|
|
/// o1 = 1); Stmt1[i0] -> [o0, o1] : (p_0 = -1 and i0 = 1 - p_1 and o0 = 1 - p_1
|
|
/// and o1 = 2 and p_2 <= 4 + p_1 and p_1 <= 0) or (p_0 = 0 and i0 = -p_1 and o0
|
|
/// = -p_1 and o1 = 2 and p_2 <= 5 + p_1 and p_1 < 0) or (p_0 = -1 and p_1 = 1
|
|
/// and i0 = 0 and o0 = 0 and o1 = 2) or (p_0 = 0 and p_1 = 0 and i0 = 0 and o0
|
|
/// = 0 and o1 = 2) }
|
|
///
|
|
/// dumpPw example (same set):
|
|
/// [p_0, p_1, p_2] -> {
|
|
/// Stmt0[0] -> [0, 0];
|
|
/// Stmt0[i0] -> [i0, 0] : 0 < i0 <= 5 - p_2;
|
|
/// Stmt1[0] -> [0, 2] : p_1 = 1 and p_0 = -1;
|
|
/// Stmt1[0] -> [0, 2] : p_1 = 0 and p_0 = 0;
|
|
/// Stmt1[1 - p_1] -> [1 - p_1, 2] : p_0 = -1 and p_1 <= 0 and p_2 <= 4 + p_1;
|
|
/// Stmt1[-p_1] -> [-p_1, 2] : p_0 = 0 and p_1 < 0 and p_2 <= 5 + p_1;
|
|
/// Stmt2[0] -> [0, 1] : p_1 >= 3 + p_0;
|
|
/// Stmt2[0] -> [0, 1] : p_1 < p_0;
|
|
/// Stmt2[0] -> [0, 1] : p_1 = 1 + p_0;
|
|
/// Stmt2[0] -> [0, 1] : p_1 = 2 and p_0 = 0;
|
|
/// Stmt2[0] -> [0, 1] : p_1 = -1 and p_0 = -1;
|
|
/// Stmt2[i0] -> [i0, 1] : i0 >= 3 + p_0 - p_1 and 0 < i0 <= 5 - p_2;
|
|
/// Stmt2[i0] -> [i0, 1] : 0 < i0 <= 5 - p_2 and i0 < p_0 - p_1;
|
|
/// Stmt2[2 - p_1] -> [2 - p_1, 1] : p_0 = 0 and p_1 <= 1 and p_2 <= 3 + p_1;
|
|
/// Stmt3[0] -> [0, 3];
|
|
/// Stmt3[i0] -> [i0, 3] : 0 < i0 <= 5 - p_2
|
|
/// }
|
|
/// @{
|
|
void dumpPw(const isl::set &Set);
|
|
void dumpPw(const isl::map &Map);
|
|
void dumpPw(const isl::union_set &USet);
|
|
void dumpPw(const isl::union_map &UMap);
|
|
void dumpPw(__isl_keep isl_set *Set);
|
|
void dumpPw(__isl_keep isl_map *Map);
|
|
void dumpPw(__isl_keep isl_union_set *USet);
|
|
void dumpPw(__isl_keep isl_union_map *UMap);
|
|
/// @}
|
|
|
|
/// Dump all points of the argument to llvm::errs().
|
|
///
|
|
/// Before being printed by dumpPw(), the argument's pieces are expanded to
|
|
/// contain only single points. If a dimension is unbounded, it keeps its
|
|
/// representation.
|
|
///
|
|
/// This is useful for debugging reduced cases where parameters are set to
|
|
/// constants to keep the example simple. Such sets can still contain
|
|
/// existential dimensions which makes the polyhedral hard to compare.
|
|
///
|
|
/// Example:
|
|
/// { [MemRef_A[i0] -> [i1]] : (exists (e0 = floor((1 + i1)/3): i0 = 1 and 3e0
|
|
/// <= i1 and 3e0 >= -1 + i1 and i1 >= 15 and i1 <= 25)) or (exists (e0 =
|
|
/// floor((i1)/3): i0 = 0 and 3e0 < i1 and 3e0 >= -2 + i1 and i1 > 0 and i1 <=
|
|
/// 11)) }
|
|
///
|
|
/// dumpExpanded:
|
|
/// {
|
|
/// [MemRef_A[0] ->[1]];
|
|
/// [MemRef_A[0] ->[2]];
|
|
/// [MemRef_A[0] ->[4]];
|
|
/// [MemRef_A[0] ->[5]];
|
|
/// [MemRef_A[0] ->[7]];
|
|
/// [MemRef_A[0] ->[8]];
|
|
/// [MemRef_A[0] ->[10]];
|
|
/// [MemRef_A[0] ->[11]];
|
|
/// [MemRef_A[1] ->[15]];
|
|
/// [MemRef_A[1] ->[16]];
|
|
/// [MemRef_A[1] ->[18]];
|
|
/// [MemRef_A[1] ->[19]];
|
|
/// [MemRef_A[1] ->[21]];
|
|
/// [MemRef_A[1] ->[22]];
|
|
/// [MemRef_A[1] ->[24]];
|
|
/// [MemRef_A[1] ->[25]]
|
|
/// }
|
|
/// @{
|
|
void dumpExpanded(const isl::set &Set);
|
|
void dumpExpanded(const isl::map &Map);
|
|
void dumpExpanded(const isl::union_set &USet);
|
|
void dumpExpanded(const isl::union_map &UMap);
|
|
void dumpExpanded(__isl_keep isl_set *Set);
|
|
void dumpExpanded(__isl_keep isl_map *Map);
|
|
void dumpExpanded(__isl_keep isl_union_set *USet);
|
|
void dumpExpanded(__isl_keep isl_union_map *UMap);
|
|
/// @}
|
|
} // namespace polly
|
|
|
|
#endif /* POLLY_ISLTOOLS_H */
|