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author | Timothy Arceri <[email protected]> | 2019-04-08 20:13:49 +1000 |
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committer | Timothy Arceri <[email protected]> | 2019-04-09 11:29:41 +1000 |
commit | e30804c6024f9b97e3a73266ee08ae6655eea5e2 (patch) | |
tree | 89e325b0553434bf011eb3fd86f27db46f1f854e /src/intel/tools/aub_write.c | |
parent | c6cf602121bec6e2c7447eb4a6302e06e9d902c9 (diff) |
nir/radv: remove restrictions on opt_if_loop_last_continue()
When I implemented opt_if_loop_last_continue() I had restricted
this pass from moving other if-statements inside the branch opposite
the continue. At the time it was causing a bunch of spilling in
shader-db for i965.
However Samuel Pitoiset noticed that making this pass more aggressive
significantly improved the performance of Doom on RADV. Below are
the statistics he gathered.
28717 shaders in 14931 tests
Totals:
SGPRS: 1267317 -> 1267549 (0.02 %)
VGPRS: 896876 -> 895920 (-0.11 %)
Spilled SGPRs: 24701 -> 26367 (6.74 %)
Code Size: 48379452 -> 48507880 (0.27 %) bytes
Max Waves: 241159 -> 241190 (0.01 %)
Totals from affected shaders:
SGPRS: 23584 -> 23816 (0.98 %)
VGPRS: 25908 -> 24952 (-3.69 %)
Spilled SGPRs: 503 -> 2169 (331.21 %)
Code Size: 2471392 -> 2599820 (5.20 %) bytes
Max Waves: 586 -> 617 (5.29 %)
The codesize increases is related to Wolfenstein II it seems largely
due to an increase in phis rather than the existing jumps.
This gives +10% FPS with Doom on my Vega56.
Rhys Perry also benchmarked Doom on his VEGA64:
Before: 72.53 FPS
After: 80.77 FPS
v2: disable pass on non-AMD drivers
Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <[email protected]> (v1)
Acked-by: Samuel Pitoiset <[email protected]>
Diffstat (limited to 'src/intel/tools/aub_write.c')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions