Loop unrolling + fusion ?

Max Bolingbroke batterseapower at hotmail.com
Mon Mar 9 13:04:16 EDT 2009


2009/3/9 Claus Reinke <claus.reinke at talk21.com>:
>>> let f = ..f.. in f{n,m} -PEEL-> let f = ..f.. in ..f{n-1,m}..
>
>> Probably what you intend here is that you create one copy of the
>> definition every round rather than one per call site, is that right?
>
> I don't think so - ultimately, the point of both peeling and unrolling is to
> unfold a definition into a use site, to enable further optimizations, not
> just to move from a recursive to a non-recursive definition. We could try to
> do it in two steps, as you suggest, but that would expose us to the
> heuristics of GHC inlining again (will or won't it inline the
> new shared definition?), in the middle of a user-annotation-based unfolding.

Ah - I was thinking of something a bit different, where:

* PEEL / UNROLL pragmas duplicate the method body once per level of
peeling / unrolling and fix up the recursive calls as appropriate
* The user optionally adds an INLINE pragma to the function if he
additionally wants to be SURE that those duplicates get inlined at the
use sites

This means that PEEL / UNROLL represent nice logically-orthogonal bits
of functionality to INLINE-ing.

Furthermore, I'm not too keen on duplicating method bodies at call
sites willy-nilly because it may lead to increased allocations (of the
function closures) in inner loops. At least if you bind the duplicated
methods at the same level as the thing you are duplicating you only
increase the dynamic number of closures created by a constant factor!
I've actually been thinking about using a different strategy for case
liberation (which duplicates method bodies at call sites) to make it
more constructor-specialisation like (which duplicates method bodies
at the definition site) partly for this reason.

Cheers,
Max


More information about the Glasgow-haskell-users mailing list