RFR: 8350579: Remove Template Assertion Predicates belonging to a loop once it is folded away
Christian Hagedorn
chagedorn at openjdk.org
Wed Mar 19 14:36:29 UTC 2025
On Thu, 27 Feb 2025 13:07:46 GMT, Christian Hagedorn <chagedorn at openjdk.org> wrote:
> The patch fixes the issue of creating an Initialized Assertion Predicate at a loop X from a Template Assertion Predicate that was originally created for a loop Y. Using the unrelated loop values from loop Y for the Initialized Assertion Predicate will let it fail during runtime and we execute a `halt` instruction. This was originally reported with [JDK-8305428](https://bugs.openjdk.org/browse/JDK-8305428).
>
> Note that most of the line changes are from new tests.
>
> ### The Problem
> There are multiple test cases triggering the same problem. In the following, when referring to "the test case", I'm referring to `testTemplateAssertionPredicateNotRemovedHalt()` which was written from scratch and contains more detailed comments explaining how we end up with executing a `Halt` node in more details.
>
> #### An Inner Loop without Parse Predicates
> The graph in `testTemplateAssertionPredicateNotRemovedHalt()` looks like this after creating `LoopNodes` for the outer `for` and inner `while (true)` loop:
>
> 
>
> We only have Parse Predicates for the outer loop. Why?
>
> Before beautify loop, we have the following region which merges multiple backedges - the one from the `for` loop and the one from the `while (true)` loop:
>
> 
>
> In `IdealLoopTree::merge_many_backedges()`, we notice that the hottest backedge is hot enough such that it is worth to have a separate merge point region for the inner and outer loop. We set everything up and eventually in `IdealLoopTree::split_outer_loop()`, we create a second `LoopNode`.
>
> For this inner `LoopNode`, we cannot set up `Parse Predicates` with the same UCTs as used for the outer loop. It would be incorrect when taking the trap to re-execute the inner and outer loop again while having already executed some of the outer loop's iterations. Thus, we get the graph shape with back-to-back `LoopNodes` as shown above.
>
> #### Predicates from a Folded Loop End up at Another Loop
> As described in the previous section, we have an inner and outer `LoopNode` while the inner does not have Parse Predicates. In a series of events (see test case comments for more details), we first hoist a range check out of the outer loop during Loop Predication with a Template Assertion Predicate. Then, we fold the outer loop away because we find that it is only running for a single iteration and the bac...
Thanks Emanuel for your review! Forgot to move this to draft state. As Roland has pointed out, it is quite fragile to do a matching during IGVN where you need to handle all kinds of of dying predicate shapes. I'm currently moving to a non-IGVN solution (https://github.com/openjdk/jdk/pull/23941 is a first step). I will then update this patch. The problem to fix is still the same though, just with a different solution.
I will get to this once I have integrated some preparatory changes.
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PR Comment: https://git.openjdk.org/jdk/pull/23823#issuecomment-2706018405
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