Provided by: llvm-14_14.0.6-19build4_amd64 bug

NAME

       llvm-mca - LLVM Machine Code Analyzer

SYNOPSIS

       llvm-mca [options] [input]

DESCRIPTION

       llvm-mca  is a performance analysis tool that uses information available in LLVM (e.g. scheduling models)
       to statically measure the performance of machine code in a specific CPU.

       Performance is measured in terms of throughput as  well  as  processor  resource  consumption.  The  tool
       currently works for processors with a backend for which there is a scheduling model available in LLVM.

       The main goal of this tool is not just to predict the performance of the code when run on the target, but
       also help with diagnosing potential performance issues.

       Given an assembly code sequence, llvm-mca estimates the Instructions Per Cycle (IPC), as well as hardware
       resource pressure. The analysis and reporting style were inspired by the IACA tool from Intel.

       For  example,  you  can  compile code with clang, output assembly, and pipe it directly into llvm-mca for
       analysis:

          $ clang foo.c -O2 -target x86_64-unknown-unknown -S -o - | llvm-mca -mcpu=btver2

       Or for Intel syntax:

          $ clang foo.c -O2 -target x86_64-unknown-unknown -mllvm -x86-asm-syntax=intel -S -o - | llvm-mca -mcpu=btver2

       (llvm-mca detects Intel syntax by the presence of an .intel_syntax directive  at  the  beginning  of  the
       input.  By default its output syntax matches that of its input.)

       Scheduling  models  are  not  just  used  to  compute  instruction  latencies and throughput, but also to
       understand what processor resources are available and how to simulate them.

       By design, the quality of the analysis conducted by llvm-mca is inevitably affected by the quality of the
       scheduling models in LLVM.

       If you see that the performance report is not accurate for a processor, please file  a  bug  against  the
       appropriate backend.

OPTIONS

       If  input  is  “-”  or  omitted,  llvm-mca  reads  from  standard input. Otherwise, it will read from the
       specified filename.

       If the -o option is omitted, then llvm-mca will send its output to standard output if the input  is  from
       standard input.  If the -o option specifies “-”, then the output will also be sent to standard output.

       -help  Print a summary of command line options.

       -o <filename>
              Use <filename> as the output filename. See the summary above for more details.

       -mtriple=<target triple>
              Specify a target triple string.

       -march=<arch>
              Specify the architecture for which to analyze the code. It defaults to the host default target.

       -mcpu=<cpuname>
              Specify  the  processor  for  which to analyze the code.  By default, the cpu name is autodetected
              from the host.

       -output-asm-variant=<variant id>
              Specify the output assembly variant for the report generated by the tool.  On x86, possible values
              are [0, 1]. A value of 0 (vic. 1) for this flag enables the AT&T (vic. Intel) assembly format  for
              the code printed out by the tool in the analysis report.

       -print-imm-hex
              Prefer hex format for numeric literals in the output assembly printed as part of the report.

       -dispatch=<width>
              Specify  a  different  dispatch  width  for  the  processor.  The dispatch width defaults to field
              ‘IssueWidth’ in the processor scheduling model.  If width is zero, then the default dispatch width
              is used.

       -register-file-size=<size>
              Specify the size of the register  file.  When  specified,  this  flag  limits  how  many  physical
              registers  are  available  for  register  renaming  purposes.  A value of zero for this flag means
              “unlimited number of physical registers”.

       -iterations=<number of iterations>
              Specify the number of iterations to run. If this flag is set to 0, then the tool sets  the  number
              of iterations to a default value (i.e. 100).

       -noalias=<bool>
              If set, the tool assumes that loads and stores don’t alias. This is the default behavior.

       -lqueue=<load queue size>
              Specify  the  size of the load queue in the load/store unit emulated by the tool.  By default, the
              tool assumes an unbound number of entries in the load queue.  A value of zero  for  this  flag  is
              ignored, and the default load queue size is used instead.

       -squeue=<store queue size>
              Specify  the  size of the store queue in the load/store unit emulated by the tool. By default, the
              tool assumes an unbound number of entries in the store queue. A value of zero  for  this  flag  is
              ignored, and the default store queue size is used instead.

       -timeline
              Enable the timeline view.

       -timeline-max-iterations=<iterations>
              Limit the number of iterations to print in the timeline view. By default, the timeline view prints
              information for up to 10 iterations.

       -timeline-max-cycles=<cycles>
              Limit  the number of cycles in the timeline view, or use 0 for no limit. By default, the number of
              cycles is set to 80.

       -resource-pressure
              Enable the resource pressure view. This is enabled by default.

       -register-file-stats
              Enable register file usage statistics.

       -dispatch-stats
              Enable extra dispatch statistics. This view collects and analyzes instruction dispatch events,  as
              well as static/dynamic dispatch stall events. This view is disabled by default.

       -scheduler-stats
              Enable  extra scheduler statistics. This view collects and analyzes instruction issue events. This
              view is disabled by default.

       -retire-stats
              Enable extra retire control unit statistics. This view is disabled by default.

       -instruction-info
              Enable the instruction info view. This is enabled by default.

       -show-encoding
              Enable the printing of instruction encodings within the instruction info view.

       -show-barriers
              Enable the printing of LoadBarrier and StoreBarrier flags within the instruction info view.

       -all-stats
              Print all hardware statistics. This enables extra statistics related to the  dispatch  logic,  the
              hardware schedulers, the register file(s), and the retire control unit. This option is disabled by
              default.

       -all-views
              Enable all the view.

       -instruction-tables
              Prints  resource pressure information based on the static information available from the processor
              model. This differs from the resource pressure view because it doesn’t require that  the  code  is
              simulated.  It  instead prints the theoretical uniform distribution of resource pressure for every
              instruction in sequence.

       -bottleneck-analysis
              Print information about bottlenecks that affect the throughput. This analysis  can  be  expensive,
              and  it  is  disabled  by  default.  Bottlenecks  are  highlighted in the summary view. Bottleneck
              analysis is currently not supported for processors with an in-order backend.

       -json  Print the requested views in valid JSON format. The instructions and the processor  resources  are
              printed  as  members  of  special  top  level JSON objects.  The individual views refer to them by
              index. However, not all views are currently supported. For example, the report from the bottleneck
              analysis is not printed out in JSON. All the default views are currently supported.

       -disable-cb
              Force usage of the generic CustomBehaviour and InstrPostProcess  classes  rather  than  using  the
              target  specific  implementation.  The generic classes never detect any custom hazards or make any
              post processing modifications to instructions.

EXIT STATUS

       llvm-mca returns 0 on success. Otherwise, an error message is printed to standard  error,  and  the  tool
       returns 1.

USING MARKERS TO ANALYZE SPECIFIC CODE BLOCKS

       llvm-mca  allows  for the optional usage of special code comments to mark regions of the assembly code to
       be analyzed.  A comment starting with substring LLVM-MCA-BEGIN marks the beginning of a  code  region.  A
       comment starting with substring LLVM-MCA-END marks the end of a code region.  For example:

          # LLVM-MCA-BEGIN
            ...
          # LLVM-MCA-END

       If  no  user-defined  region  is  specified,  then llvm-mca assumes a default region which contains every
       instruction in the input file.  Every region is analyzed in isolation, and the final  performance  report
       is the union of all the reports generated for every code region.

       Code regions can have names. For example:

          # LLVM-MCA-BEGIN A simple example
            add %eax, %eax
          # LLVM-MCA-END

       The  code  from  the example above defines a region named “A simple example” with a single instruction in
       it. Note how the region name doesn’t have to be repeated in the LLVM-MCA-END directive. In the absence of
       overlapping regions, an anonymous LLVM-MCA-END directive always ends the currently  active  user  defined
       region.

       Example of nesting regions:

          # LLVM-MCA-BEGIN foo
            add %eax, %edx
          # LLVM-MCA-BEGIN bar
            sub %eax, %edx
          # LLVM-MCA-END bar
          # LLVM-MCA-END foo

       Example of overlapping regions:

          # LLVM-MCA-BEGIN foo
            add %eax, %edx
          # LLVM-MCA-BEGIN bar
            sub %eax, %edx
          # LLVM-MCA-END foo
            add %eax, %edx
          # LLVM-MCA-END bar

       Note that multiple anonymous regions cannot overlap. Also, overlapping regions cannot have the same name.

       There  is  no  support  for  marking regions from high-level source code, like C or C++. As a workaround,
       inline assembly directives may be used:

          int foo(int a, int b) {
            __asm volatile("# LLVM-MCA-BEGIN foo":::"memory");
            a += 42;
            __asm volatile("# LLVM-MCA-END":::"memory");
            a *= b;
            return a;
          }

       However, this interferes with optimizations like loop vectorization and may have an impact  on  the  code
       generated.  This  is  because  the  __asm statements are seen as real code having important side effects,
       which limits how the code around them can be transformed. If users want to make use of inline assembly to
       emit markers, then the recommendation is to always verify that the output assembly is equivalent  to  the
       assembly  generated  in  the absence of markers.  The Clang options to emit optimization reports can also
       help in detecting missed optimizations.

HOW LLVM-MCA WORKS

       llvm-mca takes assembly code as input. The assembly code is parsed into a sequence  of  MCInst  with  the
       help  of  the  existing LLVM target assembly parsers. The parsed sequence of MCInst is then analyzed by a
       Pipeline module to generate a performance report.

       The Pipeline module simulates the execution of the machine code sequence in a loop of iterations (default
       is 100). During this process, the pipeline collects a number of execution related statistics. At the  end
       of this process, the pipeline generates and prints a report from the collected statistics.

       Here  is  an  example of a performance report generated by the tool for a dot-product of two packed float
       vectors of four elements. The analysis is conducted for target x86, cpu btver2.  The following result can
       be    produced     via     the     following     command     using     the     example     located     at
       test/tools/llvm-mca/X86/BtVer2/dot-product.s:

          $ llvm-mca -mtriple=x86_64-unknown-unknown -mcpu=btver2 -iterations=300 dot-product.s

          Iterations:        300
          Instructions:      900
          Total Cycles:      610
          Total uOps:        900

          Dispatch Width:    2
          uOps Per Cycle:    1.48
          IPC:               1.48
          Block RThroughput: 2.0

          Instruction Info:
          [1]: #uOps
          [2]: Latency
          [3]: RThroughput
          [4]: MayLoad
          [5]: MayStore
          [6]: HasSideEffects (U)

          [1]    [2]    [3]    [4]    [5]    [6]    Instructions:
           1      2     1.00                        vmulps      %xmm0, %xmm1, %xmm2
           1      3     1.00                        vhaddps     %xmm2, %xmm2, %xmm3
           1      3     1.00                        vhaddps     %xmm3, %xmm3, %xmm4

          Resources:
          [0]   - JALU0
          [1]   - JALU1
          [2]   - JDiv
          [3]   - JFPA
          [4]   - JFPM
          [5]   - JFPU0
          [6]   - JFPU1
          [7]   - JLAGU
          [8]   - JMul
          [9]   - JSAGU
          [10]  - JSTC
          [11]  - JVALU0
          [12]  - JVALU1
          [13]  - JVIMUL

          Resource pressure per iteration:
          [0]    [1]    [2]    [3]    [4]    [5]    [6]    [7]    [8]    [9]    [10]   [11]   [12]   [13]
           -      -      -     2.00   1.00   2.00   1.00    -      -      -      -      -      -      -

          Resource pressure by instruction:
          [0]    [1]    [2]    [3]    [4]    [5]    [6]    [7]    [8]    [9]    [10]   [11]   [12]   [13]   Instructions:
           -      -      -      -     1.00    -     1.00    -      -      -      -      -      -      -     vmulps      %xmm0, %xmm1, %xmm2
           -      -      -     1.00    -     1.00    -      -      -      -      -      -      -      -     vhaddps     %xmm2, %xmm2, %xmm3
           -      -      -     1.00    -     1.00    -      -      -      -      -      -      -      -     vhaddps     %xmm3, %xmm3, %xmm4

       According  to  this  report,  the  dot-product  kernel  has  been  executed 300 times, for a total of 900
       simulated instructions. The total number of simulated micro opcodes (uOps) is also 900.

       The report is structured in three main sections.  The first section collects a few  performance  numbers;
       the  goal  of  this  section  is  to  give a very quick overview of the performance throughput. Important
       performance indicators are IPC, uOps Per Cycle, and  Block RThroughput (Block Reciprocal Throughput).

       Field DispatchWidth is the maximum number of micro  opcodes  that  are  dispatched  to  the  out-of-order
       backend  every  simulated  cycle.  For  processors with an in-order backend, DispatchWidth is the maximum
       number of micro opcodes issued to the backend every simulated cycle.

       IPC is computed dividing the total number of simulated instructions by the total number of cycles.

       Field Block RThroughput is the reciprocal of the block throughput.  Block  throughput  is  a  theoretical
       quantity  computed  as  the maximum number of blocks (i.e. iterations) that can be executed per simulated
       clock cycle in the absence of loop carried dependencies. Block throughput is superiorly  limited  by  the
       dispatch rate, and the availability of hardware resources.

       In  the  absence of loop-carried data dependencies, the observed IPC tends to a theoretical maximum which
       can be computed by dividing the number of instructions of a single iteration by the Block RThroughput.

       Field ‘uOps Per Cycle’ is computed dividing the total number of simulated  micro  opcodes  by  the  total
       number  of  cycles. A delta between Dispatch Width and this field is an indicator of a performance issue.
       In the absence of loop-carried data dependencies,  the  observed  ‘uOps  Per  Cycle’  should  tend  to  a
       theoretical maximum throughput which can be computed by dividing the number of uOps of a single iteration
       by the Block RThroughput.

       Field  uOps  Per  Cycle  is  bounded from above by the dispatch width. That is because the dispatch width
       limits the maximum size of a dispatch group. Both IPC and ‘uOps Per Cycle’ are limited by the  amount  of
       hardware  parallelism. The availability of hardware resources affects the resource pressure distribution,
       and it limits the number of instructions that can be executed in parallel every cycle.  A  delta  between
       Dispatch  Width  and the theoretical maximum uOps per Cycle (computed by dividing the number of uOps of a
       single iteration by the Block RThroughput) is an indicator of a performance bottleneck caused by the lack
       of hardware resources.  In general, the lower the Block RThroughput, the better.

       In this example,  uOps  per  iteration/Block  RThroughput  is  1.50.  Since  there  are  no  loop-carried
       dependencies,  the  observed  uOps  Per  Cycle is expected to approach 1.50 when the number of iterations
       tends to infinity. The delta  between  the  Dispatch  Width  (2.00),  and  the  theoretical  maximum  uOp
       throughput  (1.50)  is an indicator of a performance bottleneck caused by the lack of hardware resources,
       and the Resource pressure view can help to identify the problematic resource usage.

       The second section of the report is the instruction info  view.  It  shows  the  latency  and  reciprocal
       throughput  of every instruction in the sequence. It also reports extra information related to the number
       of micro opcodes, and opcode properties (i.e., ‘MayLoad’, ‘MayStore’, and ‘HasSideEffects’).

       Field RThroughput is the reciprocal of the instruction throughput. Throughput is computed as the  maximum
       number  of  instructions  of  a  same type that can be executed per clock cycle in the absence of operand
       dependencies.  In  this  example,  the  reciprocal  throughput  of  a  vector   float   multiply   is   1
       cycles/instruction.  That is because the FP multiplier JFPM is only available from pipeline JFPU1.

       Instruction  encodings  are  displayed  within  the  instruction  info  view  when flag -show-encoding is
       specified.

       Below is an example of -show-encoding output for the dot-product kernel:

          Instruction Info:
          [1]: #uOps
          [2]: Latency
          [3]: RThroughput
          [4]: MayLoad
          [5]: MayStore
          [6]: HasSideEffects (U)
          [7]: Encoding Size

          [1]    [2]    [3]    [4]    [5]    [6]    [7]    Encodings:                    Instructions:
           1      2     1.00                         4     c5 f0 59 d0                   vmulps %xmm0, %xmm1, %xmm2
           1      4     1.00                         4     c5 eb 7c da                   vhaddps        %xmm2, %xmm2, %xmm3
           1      4     1.00                         4     c5 e3 7c e3                   vhaddps        %xmm3, %xmm3, %xmm4

       The Encoding Size column shows the size in bytes of instructions.  The Encodings column shows the  actual
       instruction encodings (byte sequences in hex).

       The third section is the Resource pressure view.  This view reports the average number of resource cycles
       consumed  every  iteration  by  instructions  for  every processor resource unit available on the target.
       Information is structured in two tables. The first table reports the number of resource cycles  spent  on
       average  every  iteration.  The second table correlates the resource cycles to the machine instruction in
       the sequence. For example, every iteration of the instruction vmulps always executes on resource unit [6]
       (JFPU1 - floating point pipeline #1), consuming an average of 1 resource cycle per iteration.  Note  that
       on  AMD  Jaguar,  vector  floating-point  multiply can only be issued to pipeline JFPU1, while horizontal
       floating-point additions can only be issued to pipeline JFPU0.

       The resource pressure view helps with identifying bottlenecks caused by high usage of  specific  hardware
       resources.   Situations with resource pressure mainly concentrated on a few resources should, in general,
       be avoided.  Ideally, pressure should be uniformly distributed between multiple resources.

   Timeline View
       The timeline view produces  a  detailed  report  of  each  instruction’s  state  transitions  through  an
       instruction  pipeline.   This  view  is  enabled  by  the command line option -timeline.  As instructions
       transition through the various stages of the pipeline, their states are  depicted  in  the  view  report.
       These states are represented by the following characters:

       • D : Instruction dispatched.

       • e : Instruction executing.

       • E : Instruction executed.

       • R : Instruction retired.

       • = : Instruction already dispatched, waiting to be executed.

       • - : Instruction executed, waiting to be retired.

       Below    is    the   timeline   view   for   a   subset   of   the   dot-product   example   located   in
       test/tools/llvm-mca/X86/BtVer2/dot-product.s and processed by llvm-mca using the following command:

          $ llvm-mca -mtriple=x86_64-unknown-unknown -mcpu=btver2 -iterations=3 -timeline dot-product.s

          Timeline view:
                              012345
          Index     0123456789

          [0,0]     DeeER.    .    .   vmulps   %xmm0, %xmm1, %xmm2
          [0,1]     D==eeeER  .    .   vhaddps  %xmm2, %xmm2, %xmm3
          [0,2]     .D====eeeER    .   vhaddps  %xmm3, %xmm3, %xmm4
          [1,0]     .DeeE-----R    .   vmulps   %xmm0, %xmm1, %xmm2
          [1,1]     . D=eeeE---R   .   vhaddps  %xmm2, %xmm2, %xmm3
          [1,2]     . D====eeeER   .   vhaddps  %xmm3, %xmm3, %xmm4
          [2,0]     .  DeeE-----R  .   vmulps   %xmm0, %xmm1, %xmm2
          [2,1]     .  D====eeeER  .   vhaddps  %xmm2, %xmm2, %xmm3
          [2,2]     .   D======eeeER   vhaddps  %xmm3, %xmm3, %xmm4

          Average Wait times (based on the timeline view):
          [0]: Executions
          [1]: Average time spent waiting in a scheduler's queue
          [2]: Average time spent waiting in a scheduler's queue while ready
          [3]: Average time elapsed from WB until retire stage

                [0]    [1]    [2]    [3]
          0.     3     1.0    1.0    3.3       vmulps   %xmm0, %xmm1, %xmm2
          1.     3     3.3    0.7    1.0       vhaddps  %xmm2, %xmm2, %xmm3
          2.     3     5.7    0.0    0.0       vhaddps  %xmm3, %xmm3, %xmm4
                 3     3.3    0.5    1.4       <total>

       The timeline view is interesting because it shows instruction state changes during  execution.   It  also
       gives  an  idea  of  how  the  tool  processes  instructions executed on the target, and how their timing
       information might be calculated.

       The timeline view is structured in two tables.  The first table shows instructions  changing  state  over
       time  (measured in cycles); the second table (named Average Wait times) reports useful timing statistics,
       which should help diagnose performance bottlenecks caused by long data dependencies and sub-optimal usage
       of hardware resources.

       An instruction in the timeline view is identified by a pair of indices, where the first index  identifies
       an  iteration,  and  the  second  index  is  the  instruction  index  (i.e., where it appears in the code
       sequence).  Since this example was generated using 3 iterations:  -iterations=3,  the  iteration  indices
       range from 0-2 inclusively.

       Excluding  the  first  and  last  column,  the  remaining  columns  are  in  cycles.  Cycles are numbered
       sequentially starting from 0.

       From the example output above, we know the following:

       • Instruction [1,0] was dispatched at cycle 1.

       • Instruction [1,0] started executing at cycle 2.

       • Instruction [1,0] reached the write back stage at cycle 4.

       • Instruction [1,0] was retired at cycle 10.

       Instruction [1,0] (i.e., vmulps from iteration #1) does not have to wait in the scheduler’s queue for the
       operands to become available. By the time vmulps is  dispatched,  operands  are  already  available,  and
       pipeline  JFPU1  is  ready to serve another instruction.  So the instruction can be immediately issued on
       the JFPU1 pipeline. That is demonstrated by  the  fact  that  the  instruction  only  spent  1cy  in  the
       scheduler’s queue.

       There  is  a  gap  of  5  cycles  between  the  write-back  stage  and the retire event.  That is because
       instructions must retire in program order, so [1,0] has to wait for [0,2] to be retired first  (i.e.,  it
       has to wait until cycle 10).

       In  the  example,  all  instructions  are  in  a RAW (Read After Write) dependency chain.  Register %xmm2
       written by vmulps is immediately used by the first vhaddps, and  register  %xmm3  written  by  the  first
       vhaddps  is  used  by  the second vhaddps.  Long data dependencies negatively impact the ILP (Instruction
       Level Parallelism).

       In the dot-product example,  there  are  anti-dependencies  introduced  by  instructions  from  different
       iterations.   However,  those  dependencies  can  be  removed  at register renaming stage (at the cost of
       allocating register aliases, and therefore consuming physical registers).

       Table Average Wait times helps diagnose performance issues that  are  caused  by  the  presence  of  long
       latency  instructions  and potentially long data dependencies which may limit the ILP. Last row, <total>,
       shows a global average over all instructions measured. Note that llvm-mca, by default, assumes  at  least
       1cy between the dispatch event and the issue event.

       When  the  performance  is  limited  by data dependencies and/or long latency instructions, the number of
       cycles spent while in the ready state is expected to be very small when compared with the total number of
       cycles spent in the scheduler’s queue.  The difference between the two counters is a  good  indicator  of
       how  large  of an impact data dependencies had on the execution of the instructions.  When performance is
       mostly limited by the lack of hardware resources, the delta between the two counters is small.   However,
       the  number  of  cycles  spent  in  the queue tends to be larger (i.e., more than 1-3cy), especially when
       compared to other low latency instructions.

   Bottleneck Analysis
       The -bottleneck-analysis command line option enables the analysis of performance bottlenecks.

       This analysis is potentially expensive. It attempts to correlate increases in backend pressure (caused by
       pipeline resource pressure and data dependencies) to dynamic dispatch stalls.

       Below is an example of -bottleneck-analysis output generated  by  llvm-mca  for  500  iterations  of  the
       dot-product example on btver2.

          Cycles with backend pressure increase [ 48.07% ]
          Throughput Bottlenecks:
            Resource Pressure       [ 47.77% ]
            - JFPA  [ 47.77% ]
            - JFPU0  [ 47.77% ]
            Data Dependencies:      [ 0.30% ]
            - Register Dependencies [ 0.30% ]
            - Memory Dependencies   [ 0.00% ]

          Critical sequence based on the simulation:

                        Instruction                         Dependency Information
           +----< 2.    vhaddps %xmm3, %xmm3, %xmm4
           |
           |    < loop carried >
           |
           |      0.    vmulps  %xmm0, %xmm1, %xmm2
           +----> 1.    vhaddps %xmm2, %xmm2, %xmm3         ## RESOURCE interference:  JFPA [ probability: 74% ]
           +----> 2.    vhaddps %xmm3, %xmm3, %xmm4         ## REGISTER dependency:  %xmm3
           |
           |    < loop carried >
           |
           +----> 1.    vhaddps %xmm2, %xmm2, %xmm3         ## RESOURCE interference:  JFPA [ probability: 74% ]

       According  to the analysis, throughput is limited by resource pressure and not by data dependencies.  The
       analysis observed increases in backend pressure during 48.07% of the  simulated  run.  Almost  all  those
       pressure increase events were caused by contention on processor resources JFPA/JFPU0.

       The  critical  sequence is the most expensive sequence of instructions according to the simulation. It is
       annotated to provide extra information about critical register dependencies  and  resource  interferences
       between instructions.

       Instructions   from   the  critical  sequence  are  expected  to  significantly  impact  performance.  By
       construction, the accuracy of this analysis is strongly dependent on the simulation and  (as  always)  by
       the quality of the processor model in llvm.

       Bottleneck analysis is currently not supported for processors with an in-order backend.

   Extra Statistics to Further Diagnose Performance Issues
       The  -all-stats  command  line  option enables extra statistics and performance counters for the dispatch
       logic, the reorder buffer, the retire control unit, and the register file.

       Below is an example of -all-stats output generated by  llvm-mca for 300  iterations  of  the  dot-product
       example discussed in the previous sections.

          Dynamic Dispatch Stall Cycles:
          RAT     - Register unavailable:                      0
          RCU     - Retire tokens unavailable:                 0
          SCHEDQ  - Scheduler full:                            272  (44.6%)
          LQ      - Load queue full:                           0
          SQ      - Store queue full:                          0
          GROUP   - Static restrictions on the dispatch group: 0

          Dispatch Logic - number of cycles where we saw N micro opcodes dispatched:
          [# dispatched], [# cycles]
           0,              24  (3.9%)
           1,              272  (44.6%)
           2,              314  (51.5%)

          Schedulers - number of cycles where we saw N micro opcodes issued:
          [# issued], [# cycles]
           0,          7  (1.1%)
           1,          306  (50.2%)
           2,          297  (48.7%)

          Scheduler's queue usage:
          [1] Resource name.
          [2] Average number of used buffer entries.
          [3] Maximum number of used buffer entries.
          [4] Total number of buffer entries.

           [1]            [2]        [3]        [4]
          JALU01           0          0          20
          JFPU01           17         18         18
          JLSAGU           0          0          12

          Retire Control Unit - number of cycles where we saw N instructions retired:
          [# retired], [# cycles]
           0,           109  (17.9%)
           1,           102  (16.7%)
           2,           399  (65.4%)

          Total ROB Entries:                64
          Max Used ROB Entries:             35  ( 54.7% )
          Average Used ROB Entries per cy:  32  ( 50.0% )

          Register File statistics:
          Total number of mappings created:    900
          Max number of mappings used:         35

          *  Register File #1 -- JFpuPRF:
             Number of physical registers:     72
             Total number of mappings created: 900
             Max number of mappings used:      35

          *  Register File #2 -- JIntegerPRF:
             Number of physical registers:     64
             Total number of mappings created: 0
             Max number of mappings used:      0

       If  we look at the Dynamic Dispatch Stall Cycles table, we see the counter for SCHEDQ reports 272 cycles.
       This counter is incremented every time the dispatch logic is unable to dispatch a full group because  the
       scheduler’s queue is full.

       Looking at the Dispatch Logic table, we see that the pipeline was only able to dispatch two micro opcodes
       51.5%  of  the  time.   The  dispatch  group  was  limited to one micro opcode 44.6% of the cycles, which
       corresponds to 272 cycles.  The dispatch statistics are displayed by  either  using  the  command  option
       -all-stats or -dispatch-stats.

       The  next  table,  Schedulers,  presents a histogram displaying a count, representing the number of micro
       opcodes issued on some number of cycles. In this case, of the 610 simulated cycles, single  opcodes  were
       issued 306 times (50.2%) and there were 7 cycles where no opcodes were issued.

       The  Scheduler’s  queue  usage  table  shows that the average and maximum number of buffer entries (i.e.,
       scheduler queue entries) used at runtime.  Resource JFPU01 reached its maximum (18 of 18 queue  entries).
       Note that AMD Jaguar implements three schedulers:

       • JALU01 - A scheduler for ALU instructions.

       • JFPU01 - A scheduler floating point operations.

       • JLSAGU - A scheduler for address generation.

       The  dot-product  is  a  kernel  of  three floating point instructions (a vector multiply followed by two
       horizontal adds).  That explains why only the floating point scheduler appears to be used.

       A full scheduler queue is either caused by data dependency chains or by a sub-optimal usage  of  hardware
       resources.   Sometimes,  resource  pressure  can  be  mitigated  by  rewriting the kernel using different
       instructions that consume different  scheduler  resources.   Schedulers  with  a  small  queue  are  less
       resilient  to bottlenecks caused by the presence of long data dependencies.  The scheduler statistics are
       displayed by using the command option -all-stats or -scheduler-stats.

       The next table, Retire Control Unit, presents a histogram displaying a count, representing the number  of
       instructions  retired  on  some  number  of  cycles.   In  this  case,  of  the 610 simulated cycles, two
       instructions were retired during the same cycle 399 times (65.4%) and there  were  109  cycles  where  no
       instructions were retired.  The retire statistics are displayed by using the command option -all-stats or
       -retire-stats.

       The  last  table  presented  is  Register File statistics.  Each physical register file (PRF) used by the
       pipeline is presented in this table.  In the case of AMD Jaguar, there are two register  files,  one  for
       floating-point  registers (JFpuPRF) and one for integer registers (JIntegerPRF).  The table shows that of
       the 900 instructions processed, there were 900 mappings created.  Since this dot-product example utilized
       only floating point registers, the JFPuPRF was responsible for creating the 900  mappings.   However,  we
       see  that the pipeline only used a maximum of 35 of 72 available register slots at any given time. We can
       conclude that the floating point PRF was the only register file used for the example,  and  that  it  was
       never  resource  constrained.   The  register  file  statistics are displayed by using the command option
       -all-stats or -register-file-stats.

       In this example, we can conclude that the IPC is mostly limited by data dependencies, and not by resource
       pressure.

   Instruction Flow
       This section describes the instruction flow through the default pipeline of  llvm-mca,  as  well  as  the
       functional units involved in the process.

       The default pipeline implements the following sequence of stages used to process instructions.

       • Dispatch (Instruction is dispatched to the schedulers).

       • Issue (Instruction is issued to the processor pipelines).

       • Write Back (Instruction is executed, and results are written back).

       • Retire (Instruction is retired; writes are architecturally committed).

       The  in-order pipeline implements the following sequence of stages: * InOrderIssue (Instruction is issued
       to the processor pipelines).  * Retire (Instruction is retired; writes are architecturally committed).

       llvm-mca assumes that instructions have all been decoded and placed into a queue  before  the  simulation
       start. Therefore, the instruction fetch and decode stages are not modeled. Performance bottlenecks in the
       frontend are not diagnosed. Also, llvm-mca does not model branch prediction.

   Instruction Dispatch
       During  the  dispatch  stage,  instructions  are  picked in program order from a queue of already decoded
       instructions, and dispatched in groups to the simulated hardware schedulers.

       The size of a dispatch group depends on the  availability  of  the  simulated  hardware  resources.   The
       processor dispatch width defaults to the value of the IssueWidth in LLVM’s scheduling model.

       An instruction can be dispatched if:

       • The size of the dispatch group is smaller than processor’s dispatch width.

       • There are enough entries in the reorder buffer.

       • There are enough physical registers to do register renaming.

       • The schedulers are not full.

       Scheduling  models  can  optionally specify which register files are available on the processor. llvm-mca
       uses that information to initialize register file descriptors.  Users can limit the  number  of  physical
       registers   that   are   globally   available   for   register  renaming  by  using  the  command  option
       -register-file-size.  A value of zero for this option means unbounded. By knowing how many registers  are
       available for renaming, the tool can predict dispatch stalls caused by the lack of physical registers.

       The  number  of  reorder buffer entries consumed by an instruction depends on the number of micro-opcodes
       specified for that instruction by the target scheduling model.  The reorder  buffer  is  responsible  for
       tracking  the  progress  of  instructions  that are “in-flight”, and retiring them in program order.  The
       number of entries in the reorder buffer defaults to the value specified by field MicroOpBufferSize in the
       target scheduling model.

       Instructions that are dispatched to the schedulers consume scheduler buffer entries. llvm-mca queries the
       scheduling model to determine the set  of  buffered  resources  consumed  by  an  instruction.   Buffered
       resources are treated like scheduler resources.

   Instruction Issue
       Each  processor  scheduler  implements  a  buffer  of  instructions.   An  instruction has to wait in the
       scheduler’s buffer until input register  operands  become  available.   Only  at  that  point,  does  the
       instruction  becomes  eligible  for execution and may be issued (potentially out-of-order) for execution.
       Instruction latencies are computed by llvm-mca with the help of the scheduling model.

       llvm-mca’s scheduler is designed to simulate multiple processor schedulers.  The scheduler is responsible
       for tracking data dependencies, and dynamically selecting  which  processor  resources  are  consumed  by
       instructions.   It delegates the management of processor resource units and resource groups to a resource
       manager.  The resource manager  is  responsible  for  selecting  resource  units  that  are  consumed  by
       instructions.   For  example,  if  an  instruction consumes 1cy of a resource group, the resource manager
       selects one of the available units from the group; by default, the resource manager  uses  a  round-robin
       selector to guarantee that resource usage is uniformly distributed between all units of a group.

       llvm-mca’s scheduler internally groups instructions into three sets:

       • WaitSet: a set of instructions whose operands are not ready.

       • ReadySet: a set of instructions ready to execute.

       • IssuedSet: a set of instructions executing.

       Depending  on  the  operands  availability,  instructions that are dispatched to the scheduler are either
       placed into the WaitSet or into the ReadySet.

       Every cycle, the scheduler checks if instructions can be moved from the WaitSet to the ReadySet,  and  if
       instructions from the ReadySet can be issued to the underlying pipelines. The algorithm prioritizes older
       instructions over younger instructions.

   Write-Back and Retire Stage
       Issued  instructions  are  moved from the ReadySet to the IssuedSet.  There, instructions wait until they
       reach the write-back stage.  At that point, they get removed from the queue and the retire  control  unit
       is notified.

       When instructions are executed, the retire control unit flags the instruction as “ready to retire.”

       Instructions  are  retired  in program order.  The register file is notified of the retirement so that it
       can free the physical registers that were allocated for the  instruction  during  the  register  renaming
       stage.

   Load/Store Unit and Memory Consistency Model
       To simulate an out-of-order execution of memory operations, llvm-mca utilizes a simulated load/store unit
       (LSUnit) to simulate the speculative execution of loads and stores.

       Each  load (or store) consumes an entry in the load (or store) queue. Users can specify flags -lqueue and
       -squeue to limit the number of entries in  the  load  and  store  queues  respectively.  The  queues  are
       unbounded by default.

       The LSUnit implements a relaxed consistency model for memory loads and stores.  The rules are:

       1. A  younger  load  is allowed to pass an older load only if there are no intervening stores or barriers
          between the two loads.

       2. A younger load is allowed to pass an older store provided that the load does not alias with the store.

       3. A younger store is not allowed to pass an older store.

       4. A younger store is not allowed to pass an older load.

       By default, the LSUnit optimistically assumes that loads do not alias (-noalias=true)  store  operations.
       Under  this  assumption,  younger loads are always allowed to pass older stores.  Essentially, the LSUnit
       does not attempt to run any alias analysis to predict when loads and stores do not alias with each other.

       Note that, in the case of write-combining memory,  rule  3  could  be  relaxed  to  allow  reordering  of
       non-aliasing  store  operations.   That  being  said, at the moment, there is no way to further relax the
       memory model (-noalias is the only option).  Essentially, there is  no  option  to  specify  a  different
       memory  type  (e.g.,  write-back,  write-combining,  write-through;  etc.) and consequently to weaken, or
       strengthen, the memory model.

       Other limitations are:

       • The LSUnit does not know when store-to-load forwarding may occur.

       • The LSUnit does not know anything about cache hierarchy and memory types.

       • The LSUnit does not know how to identify serializing operations and memory fences.

       The LSUnit does not attempt to predict if a load or store hits or misses the L1 cache.  It only knows  if
       an  instruction  “MayLoad”  and/or  “MayStore.”  For loads, the scheduling model provides an “optimistic”
       load-to-use latency (which usually matches the load-to-use latency for when there is a hit in the L1D).

       llvm-mca does not (on its own) know about serializing operations  or  memory-barrier  like  instructions.
       The  LSUnit used to conservatively use an instruction’s “MayLoad”, “MayStore”, and unmodeled side effects
       flags to determine whether an instruction should be treated as a memory-barrier. This was  inaccurate  in
       general  and  was  changed  so  that now each instruction has an IsAStoreBarrier and IsALoadBarrier flag.
       These flags are mca specific and default to false for every instruction. If any instruction  should  have
       either of these flags set, it should be done within the target’s InstrPostProcess class.  For an example,
       look         at        the        X86InstrPostProcess::postProcessInstruction        method        within
       llvm/lib/Target/X86/MCA/X86CustomBehaviour.cpp.

       A load/store barrier consumes one entry of the load/store queue.  A load/store barrier enforces  ordering
       of  loads/stores.   A younger load cannot pass a load barrier.  Also, a younger store cannot pass a store
       barrier.  A younger load has to wait for the memory/load barrier to execute.   A  load/store  barrier  is
       “executed” when it becomes the oldest entry in the load/store queue(s). That also means, by construction,
       all of the older loads/stores have been executed.

       In conclusion, the full set of load/store consistency rules are:

       1. A store may not pass a previous store.

       2. A store may not pass a previous load (regardless of -noalias).

       3. A store has to wait until an older store barrier is fully executed.

       4. A load may pass a previous load.

       5. A load may not pass a previous store unless -noalias is set.

       6. A load has to wait until an older load barrier is fully executed.

   In-order Issue and Execute
       In-order processors are modelled as a single InOrderIssueStage stage. It bypasses Dispatch, Scheduler and
       Load/Store  unit.  Instructions  are issued as soon as their operand registers are available and resource
       requirements are met. Multiple instructions can be issued in one cycle according  to  the  value  of  the
       IssueWidth parameter in LLVM’s scheduling model.

       Once issued, an instruction is moved to IssuedInst set until it is ready to retire. llvm-mca ensures that
       writes  are  committed  in-order.  However,  an  instruction  is  allowed  to  commit  writes  and retire
       out-of-order if RetireOOO property is true for at least one of its writes.

   Custom Behaviour
       Due to certain instructions not being expressed perfectly within their scheduling model,  llvm-mca  isn’t
       always  able  to  simulate  them  perfectly.  Modifying the scheduling model isn’t always a viable option
       though (maybe because the instruction is modeled incorrectly on purpose or the instruction’s behaviour is
       quite complex). The CustomBehaviour class can be used  in  these  cases  to  enforce  proper  instruction
       modeling  (often  by  customizing  data  dependencies  and  detecting hazards that llvm-mca has no way of
       knowing about).

       llvm-mca comes with one generic and multiple target specific CustomBehaviour classes. The  generic  class
       will  be used if the -disable-cb flag is used or if a target specific CustomBehaviour class doesn’t exist
       for that target. (The generic class does nothing.) Currently, the CustomBehaviour class is only a part of
       the in-order pipeline, but there are plans to add it to the out-of-order pipeline in the future.

       CustomBehaviour’s main method is checkCustomHazard() which uses the current instruction and a list of all
       instructions still executing within the pipeline to  determine  if  the  current  instruction  should  be
       dispatched.   As output, the method returns an integer representing the number of cycles that the current
       instruction must stall for (this can be an underestimate if you don’t know the exact number and  a  value
       of 0 represents no stall).

       If  you’d  like  to  add  a CustomBehaviour class for a target that doesn’t already have one, refer to an
       existing implementation to see how to set it up. The classes are implemented within the  target  specific
       backend (for example /llvm/lib/Target/AMDGPU/MCA/) so that they can access backend symbols.

   Custom Views
       llvm-mca comes with several Views such as the Timeline View and Summary View. These Views are generic and
       can  work  with  most  (if  not  all)  targets. If you wish to add a new View to llvm-mca and it does not
       require any backend functionality that is not already exposed through MC layer classes  (MCSubtargetInfo,
       MCInstrInfo,  etc.),  please  add it to the /tools/llvm-mca/View/ directory. However, if your new View is
       target specific AND requires unexposed backend symbols  or  functionality,  you  can  define  it  in  the
       /lib/Target/<TargetName>/MCA/ directory.

       To enable this target specific View, you will have to use this target’s CustomBehaviour class to override
       the CustomBehaviour::getViews() methods.  There are 3 variations of these methods based on where you want
       your  View  to  appear  in the output: getStartViews(), getPostInstrInfoViews(), and getEndViews(). These
       methods returns a vector of Views so you will want to return  a  vector  containing  all  of  the  target
       specific Views for the target in question.

       Because  these  target  specific  (and  backend  dependent) Views require the CustomBehaviour::getViews()
       variants, these Views will not be enabled if the -disable-cb flag is used.

       Enabling these custom Views does not affect the non-custom (generic) Views.  Continue to  use  the  usual
       command line arguments to enable / disable those Views.

AUTHOR

       Maintained by the LLVM Team (https://llvm.org/).

COPYRIGHT

       2003-2024, LLVM Project

14                                                 2024-04-07                                        LLVM-MCA(1)