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.NH 2
The model of strength reduction
.PP
In this section we will describe
the transformations performed by
Strength Reduction (SR).
Before doing so, we will introduce the
central notion of an induction variable.
.NH 3
Induction variables
.PP
SR looks for variables whose
values form an arithmetic progression
at the beginning of a loop.
These variables are called induction variables.
The most frequently occurring example of such
a variable is a loop-variable in a high-order
programming language.
Several quite sophisticated models of strength
reduction can be found in the literature.
.[
cocke reduction strength cacm
.]
.[
allen cocke kennedy reduction strength
.]
.[
lowry medlock cacm
.]
.[
aho compiler design
.]
In these models the notion of an induction variable
is far more general than the intuitive notion
of a loop-variable.
The definition of an induction variable we present here
is more restricted,
yielding a simpler model and simpler transformations.
We think the principle source for strength reduction lies in
expressions using a loop-variable,
i.e. a variable that is incremented or decremented
by the same amount after every loop iteration,
and that cannot be changed in any other way.
.PP
Of course, the EM code does not contain high level constructs
such as for-statements.
We will define an induction variable in terms
of the Intermediate Code of the optimizer.
Note that the notions of a loop in the
EM text and of a firm basic block
were defined in section 3.3.5.
.sp
.UL definition
.sp 0
An induction variable i of a loop L is a local variable
that is never accessed indirectly,
whose size is the word size of the target machine, and
that is assigned exactly once within L,
the assignment:
.IP -
being of the form i := i + c or i := c +i,
c is a constant
called the \fIstep value\fR of i.
.IP -
occurring in a firm block of L.
.LP
(Note that the first restriction on the assignment
is not described in terms of the Intermediate Code;
we will give such a description later; the current
definition is easier to understand however).
.NH 3
Recognized expressions
.PP
SR recognizes certain expressions using
an induction variable and replaces
them by cheaper ones.
Two kinds of expensive operations are recognized:
multiplication and array address computations.
The expressions that are simplified must
use an induction variable
as an operand of
a multiplication or as index in an array expression.
.PP
Often a linear function of an induction variable is used,
rather than the variable itself.
In these cases optimization is still possible.
We call such expressions \fIiv-expressions\fR.
.sp
.UL definition:
.sp 0
An iv-expression of an induction variable i of a loop L is
an expression that:
.IP -
uses only the operators + and - (unary as well as binary)
.IP -
uses i as operand exactly once
.IP -
uses (besides i) only constants or variables that are
never changed in L as operands.
.LP
.PP
The expressions recognized by SR are of the following forms:
.IP (1)
iv_expression * constant
.IP (2)
constant * iv_expression
.IP (3)
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A[iv-expression] := \kx(assign to array element)
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.IP (4)
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A[iv-expression] \h'|\nxu'(use array element)
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.IP (5)
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& A[iv-expression] \h'|\nxu'(take address of array element)
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.LP
(Note that EM has different instructions to use an array element,
store into one, or take the address of one, resp. LAR, SAR, and AAR).
.sp 0
The size of the elements of A must
be known statically.
In cases (3) and (4) this size
must equal the word size of the
target machine.
.NH 3
Transformations
.PP
With every recognized expression we associate
a new temporary local variable TMP,
allocated in the stack frame of the
procedure containing the expression.
At any program point within the loop, TMP will
contain the following value:
.IP multiplication: 18
the current value of iv-expression * constant
.IP arrays:
the current value of &A[iv-expression].
.LP
In the second case, TMP essentially is a pointer variable,
pointing to the element of A that is currently in use.
.sp 0
If the same expression occurs several times in the loop,
the same temporary local is used each time.
.PP
Three transformations are applied to the EM text:
.IP (1)
TMP is initialized with the right value.
This initialization takes place just
before the loop.
.IP (2)
The recognized expression is simplified.
.IP (3)
TMP is incremented; this takes place just
after the induction variable is incremented.
.LP
For multiplication, the initial value of TMP
is the value of the recognized expression at
the program point immediately before the loop.
For arrays, TMP is initialized with the address
of the first array element that is accessed.
So the initialization code is:
.DS
TMP := iv-expression * constant; or
TMP := &A[iv-expression]
.DE
At the point immediately before the loop,
the induction variable will already have been
initialized,
so the value used in the code above will be the
value it has during the first iteration.
.PP
For multiplication, the recognized expression can simply be
replaced by TMP.
For array optimizations, the replacement
depends on the form:
.DS
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.TS
l l l.
\fIform\fR \fIreplacement\fR
(3) A[iv-expr] := *TMP := (assign indirect)
(4) A[iv-expr] *TMP (use indirect)
(5) &A[iv-expr] TMP
.TE
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.DE
The '*' denotes the indirect operator. (Note that
EM has different instructions to do
an assign-indirect and a use-indirect).
As the size of the array elements is restricted
to be the word size in case (3) and (4),
only one EM instruction needs to
be generated in all cases.
.PP
The amount by which TMP is incremented is:
.IP multiplication: 18
step value * constant
.IP arrays:
step value * element size
.LP
Note that the step value (see definition of induction variable above),
the constant, and the element size (see previous section) can all
be determined statically.
If the sign of the induction variable in the
iv-expression is negative, the amount
must be negated.
.PP
The transformations are demonstrated by an example.
.DS
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.TS
l l.
i := 100; i := 100;
while i > 1 loop TMP := (6-i) * 5;
X := (6-i) * 5 + 2; while i > 1 loop
Y := (6-i) * 5 - 8;\ \ \ \ \ \ \ --> X := TMP + 2;
i := i - 3; Y := TMP - 8;
end loop; i := i - 3;
TMP := TMP + 15;
end loop;
.TE
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Fig. 6.2 Example of complex Strength Reduction transformations
.DE
The expression '(6-i)*5' is recognized twice. The constant
is 5.
The step value is -3.
The sign of i in the recognized expression is '-'.
So the increment value of TMP is -(-3*5) = +15.