RFR: 8323582: C2 SuperWord AlignVector: misaligned vector memory access with unaligned native memory [v4]
Vladimir Kozlov
kvn at openjdk.org
Tue Feb 25 17:32:02 UTC 2025
On Tue, 25 Feb 2025 09:27:13 GMT, Emanuel Peter <epeter at openjdk.org> wrote:
>> Note: the approach with Predicates and Multiversioning prepares us well for Runtime Checks for Aliasing Analysis, see more below.
>>
>> **Background**
>>
>> With `-XX:+AlignVector`, all vector loads/stores must be aligned. We try to statically determine if we can always align the vectors. One condition is that the address `base` is already aligned. For arrays, we know that this always holds, because they are `ObjectAlignmentInBytes` aligned. But with native memory, the `base` is just some arbitrarily aligned pointer.
>>
>> **Problem**
>>
>> So far, we have just naively assumed that the `base` is always `ObjectAlignmentInBytes` aligned. But that does not hold for `native` memory segments: the `base` can also be unaligned. I had constructed such an example, and with `-XX:+AlignVector -XX:+VerifyAlignVector` this example hits the verification code.
>>
>>
>> MemorySegment nativeAligned = Arena.ofAuto().allocate(RANGE * 4 + 1);
>> MemorySegment nativeUnaligned = nativeAligned.asSlice(1);
>> test3(nativeUnaligned);
>>
>>
>> When compiling the test method, we assume that the `nativeUnaligned.address()` is aligned - but it is not!
>>
>> static void test3(MemorySegment ms) {
>> for (int i = 0; i < RANGE; i++) {
>> long adr = i * 4L;
>> int v = ms.get(ELEMENT_LAYOUT, adr);
>> ms.set(ELEMENT_LAYOUT, adr, (int)(v + 1));
>> }
>> }
>>
>>
>> **Solution: Runtime Checks - Predicate and Multiversioning**
>>
>> Of course we could just forbid cases where we have a `native` base from vectorizing. But that would lead to regressions currently - in most cases we do get aligned `base`s, and we currently vectorize those. We cannot statically determine if the `base` is aligned, we need a runtime check.
>>
>> I came up with 2 options where to place the runtime checks:
>> - A new "auto vectorization" Parse Predicate:
>> - This only works when predicates are available.
>> - If we fail the predicate, then we recompile without the predicate. That means we cannot add a check to the predicate any more, and we would have to do multiversioning at that point if we still want to have a vectorized loop.
>> - Multiversion the loop:
>> - Create 2 copies of the loop (fast and slow loops).
>> - The `fast_loop` can make speculative alignment assumptions, and add the corresponding check to the `multiversion_if` which decides which loop we take
>> - In the `slow_loop`, we make no assumption which means we can not vectorize, but we still compile - so even ...
>
> Emanuel Peter has updated the pull request with a new target base due to a merge or a rebase. The pull request now contains 66 commits:
>
> - Merge branch 'master' into JDK-8323582-SW-native-alignment
> - stall -> delay, plus some more comments
> - adjust selector if probability
> - Merge branch 'master' into JDK-8323582-SW-native-alignment
> - remove multiversion mark if we break the structure
> - register opaque with igvn
> - copyright and rm CFG check
> - IR rules for all cases
> - 3 test versions
> - test changed to unaligned ints
> - ... and 56 more: https://git.openjdk.org/jdk/compare/d551daca...8eb52292
This looks good for me.
-------------
Marked as reviewed by kvn (Reviewer).
PR Review: https://git.openjdk.org/jdk/pull/22016#pullrequestreview-2641927937
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