This makes both logical sense (see below) and increases the
number of functions marked readnone/readonly by about 1-2%
in practice. The number of functions marked nocapture goes
up by about 5-10%. The reason it makes sense is shown by
the following example: if you run -functionattrs -inline on
it, then no attributes are assigned. But if you instead run
-inline -functionattrs then @f is marked readnone because the
simplifications produced by the inliner eliminate the store.
@x = external global i32
define void @w(i1 %b) {
br i1 %b, label %write, label %return
write:
store i32 1, i32 *@x
br label %return
return:
ret void
}
define void @f() {
call void @w(i1 0)
ret void
}
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@85893
91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-
96231b3b80d8
PM->add(createCFGSimplificationPass()); // Clean up after IPCP & DAE
// Start of CallGraph SCC passes.
- if (UnitAtATime) {
- if (HaveExceptions)
- PM->add(createPruneEHPass()); // Remove dead EH info
- PM->add(createFunctionAttrsPass()); // Set readonly/readnone attrs
- }
+ if (UnitAtATime && HaveExceptions)
+ PM->add(createPruneEHPass()); // Remove dead EH info
if (InliningPass)
PM->add(InliningPass);
+ if (UnitAtATime)
+ PM->add(createFunctionAttrsPass()); // Set readonly/readnone attrs
if (OptimizationLevel > 2)
PM->add(createArgumentPromotionPass()); // Scalarize uninlined fn args