1 ;;;; structures for the first intermediate representation in the
4 ;;;; This software is part of the SBCL system. See the README file for
7 ;;;; This software is derived from the CMU CL system, which was
8 ;;;; written at Carnegie Mellon University and released into the
9 ;;;; public domain. The software is in the public domain and is
10 ;;;; provided with absolutely no warranty. See the COPYING and CREDITS
11 ;;;; files for more information.
15 ;;; The front-end data structure (IR1) is composed of nodes,
16 ;;; representing actual evaluations. Linear sequences of nodes in
17 ;;; control-flow order are combined into blocks (but see
18 ;;; JOIN-SUCCESSOR-IF-POSSIBLE for precise conditions); control
19 ;;; transfers inside a block are represented with CTRANs and between
20 ;;; blocks -- with BLOCK-SUCC/BLOCK-PRED lists; data transfers are
21 ;;; represented with LVARs.
23 ;;; "Lead-in" Control TRANsfer [to some node]
25 (:make-load-form-fun ignore-it)
26 (:constructor make-ctran))
27 ;; an indication of the way that this continuation is currently used
30 ;; A continuation for which all control-related slots have the
31 ;; default values. A continuation is unused during IR1 conversion
32 ;; until it is assigned a block, and may be also be temporarily
33 ;; unused during later manipulations of IR1. In a consistent
34 ;; state there should never be any mention of :UNUSED
35 ;; continuations. NEXT can have a non-null value if the next node
36 ;; has already been determined.
39 ;; The continuation that is the START of BLOCK.
42 ;; A continuation that is the NEXT of some node in BLOCK.
43 (kind :unused :type (member :unused :inside-block :block-start))
44 ;; A NODE which is to be evaluated next. Null only temporary.
45 (next nil :type (or node null))
46 ;; the node where this CTRAN is used, if unique. This is always null
47 ;; in :UNUSED and :BLOCK-START CTRANs, and is never null in
48 ;; :INSIDE-BLOCK continuations.
49 (use nil :type (or node null))
50 ;; the basic block this continuation is in. This is null only in
51 ;; :UNUSED continuations.
52 (block nil :type (or cblock null)))
54 (def!method print-object ((x ctran) stream)
55 (print-unreadable-object (x stream :type t :identity t)
56 (format stream " #~D" (cont-num x))))
58 ;;; Linear VARiable. Multiple-value (possibly of unknown number)
61 (:make-load-form-fun ignore-it)
62 (:constructor make-lvar (&optional dest)))
63 ;; The node which receives this value. NIL only temporarily.
64 (dest nil :type (or node null))
65 ;; cached type of this lvar's value. If NIL, then this must be
66 ;; recomputed: see LVAR-DERIVED-TYPE.
67 (%derived-type nil :type (or ctype null))
68 ;; the node (if unique) or a list of nodes where this lvar is used.
69 (uses nil :type (or node list))
70 ;; set to true when something about this lvar's value has
71 ;; changed. See REOPTIMIZE-LVAR. This provides a way for IR1
72 ;; optimize to determine which operands to a node have changed. If
73 ;; the optimizer for this node type doesn't care, it can elect not
74 ;; to clear this flag.
75 (reoptimize t :type boolean)
76 ;; Cached type which is checked by DEST. If NIL, then this must be
77 ;; recomputed: see LVAR-EXTERNALLY-CHECKABLE-TYPE.
78 (%externally-checkable-type nil :type (or null ctype))
79 ;; something or other that the back end annotates this lvar with
82 (def!method print-object ((x lvar) stream)
83 (print-unreadable-object (x stream :type t :identity t)
84 (format stream " #~D" (cont-num x))))
86 (defstruct (node (:constructor nil)
88 ;; unique ID for debugging
89 #!+sb-show (id (new-object-id) :read-only t)
90 ;; True if this node needs to be optimized. This is set to true
91 ;; whenever something changes about the value of an lvar whose DEST
93 (reoptimize t :type boolean)
94 ;; the ctran indicating what we do controlwise after evaluating this
95 ;; node. This is null if the node is the last in its block.
96 (next nil :type (or ctran null))
97 ;; the ctran that this node is the NEXT of. This is null during IR1
98 ;; conversion when we haven't linked the node in yet or in nodes
99 ;; that have been deleted from the IR1 by UNLINK-NODE.
100 (prev nil :type (or ctran null))
101 ;; the lexical environment this node was converted in
102 (lexenv *lexenv* :type lexenv)
103 ;; a representation of the source code responsible for generating
106 ;; For a form introduced by compilation (does not appear in the
107 ;; original source), the path begins with a list of all the
108 ;; enclosing introduced forms. This list is from the inside out,
109 ;; with the form immediately responsible for this node at the head
112 ;; Following the introduced forms is a representation of the
113 ;; location of the enclosing original source form. This transition
114 ;; is indicated by the magic ORIGINAL-SOURCE-START marker. The first
115 ;; element of the original source is the "form number", which is the
116 ;; ordinal number of this form in a depth-first, left-to-right walk
117 ;; of the truly-top-level form in which this appears.
119 ;; Following is a list of integers describing the path taken through
120 ;; the source to get to this point:
121 ;; (K L M ...) => (NTH K (NTH L (NTH M ...)))
123 ;; The last element in the list is the top level form number, which
124 ;; is the ordinal number (in this call to the compiler) of the truly
125 ;; top level form containing the original source.
126 (source-path *current-path* :type list)
127 ;; If this node is in a tail-recursive position, then this is set to
128 ;; T. At the end of IR1 (in physical environment analysis) this is
129 ;; computed for all nodes (after cleanup code has been emitted).
130 ;; Before then, a non-null value indicates that IR1 optimization has
131 ;; converted a tail local call to a direct transfer.
133 ;; If the back-end breaks tail-recursion for some reason, then it
134 ;; can null out this slot.
135 (tail-p nil :type boolean))
137 (defstruct (valued-node (:conc-name node-)
141 ;; the bottom-up derived type for this node.
142 (derived-type *wild-type* :type ctype)
143 ;; Lvar, receiving the values, produced by this node. May be NIL if
144 ;; the value is unused.
145 (lvar nil :type (or lvar null)))
147 ;;; Flags that are used to indicate various things about a block, such
148 ;;; as what optimizations need to be done on it:
149 ;;; -- REOPTIMIZE is set when something interesting happens the uses of a
150 ;;; lvar whose DEST is in this block. This indicates that the
151 ;;; value-driven (forward) IR1 optimizations should be done on this block.
152 ;;; -- FLUSH-P is set when code in this block becomes potentially flushable,
153 ;;; usually due to an lvar's DEST becoming null.
154 ;;; -- TYPE-CHECK is true when the type check phase should be run on this
155 ;;; block. IR1 optimize can introduce new blocks after type check has
156 ;;; already run. We need to check these blocks, but there is no point in
157 ;;; checking blocks we have already checked.
158 ;;; -- DELETE-P is true when this block is used to indicate that this block
159 ;;; has been determined to be unreachable and should be deleted. IR1
160 ;;; phases should not attempt to examine or modify blocks with DELETE-P
161 ;;; set, since they may:
162 ;;; - be in the process of being deleted, or
163 ;;; - have no successors.
164 ;;; -- TYPE-ASSERTED, TEST-MODIFIED
165 ;;; These flags are used to indicate that something in this block
166 ;;; might be of interest to constraint propagation. TYPE-ASSERTED
167 ;;; is set when an lvar type assertion is strengthened.
168 ;;; TEST-MODIFIED is set whenever the test for the ending IF has
169 ;;; changed (may be true when there is no IF.)
170 (!def-boolean-attribute block
171 reoptimize flush-p type-check delete-p type-asserted test-modified)
173 ;;; FIXME: Tweak so that definitions of e.g. BLOCK-DELETE-P is
174 ;;; findable by grep for 'def.*block-delete-p'.
175 (macrolet ((frob (slot)
176 `(defmacro ,(symbolicate "BLOCK-" slot) (block)
177 `(block-attributep (block-flags ,block) ,',slot))))
183 (frob test-modified))
185 ;;; The CBLOCK structure represents a basic block. We include
186 ;;; SSET-ELEMENT so that we can have sets of blocks. Initially the
187 ;;; SSET-ELEMENT-NUMBER is null, DFO analysis numbers in reverse DFO.
188 ;;; During IR2 conversion, IR1 blocks are re-numbered in forward emit
189 ;;; order. This latter numbering also forms the basis of the block
190 ;;; numbering in the debug-info (though that is relative to the start
191 ;;; of the function.)
192 (defstruct (cblock (:include sset-element)
193 (:constructor make-block (start))
194 (:constructor make-block-key)
196 (:predicate block-p))
197 ;; a list of all the blocks that are predecessors/successors of this
198 ;; block. In well-formed IR1, most blocks will have one successor.
199 ;; The only exceptions are:
200 ;; 1. component head blocks (any number)
201 ;; 2. blocks ending in an IF (1 or 2)
202 ;; 3. blocks with DELETE-P set (zero)
203 (pred nil :type list)
204 (succ nil :type list)
205 ;; the ctran which heads this block (a :BLOCK-START), or NIL when we
206 ;; haven't made the start ctran yet (and in the dummy component head
208 (start nil :type (or ctran null))
209 ;; the last node in this block. This is NIL when we are in the
210 ;; process of building a block (and in the dummy component head and
212 (last nil :type (or node null))
213 ;; the forward and backward links in the depth-first ordering of the
214 ;; blocks. These slots are NIL at beginning/end.
215 (next nil :type (or null cblock))
216 (prev nil :type (or null cblock))
217 ;; This block's attributes: see above.
218 (flags (block-attributes reoptimize flush-p type-check type-asserted
221 ;; in constraint propagation: list of LAMBDA-VARs killed in this block
222 ;; in copy propagation: list of killed TNs
224 ;; other sets used in constraint propagation and/or copy propagation
228 ;; the component this block is in, or NIL temporarily during IR1
229 ;; conversion and in deleted blocks
231 (aver-live-component *current-component*)
233 :type (or component null))
234 ;; a flag used by various graph-walking code to determine whether
235 ;; this block has been processed already or what. We make this
236 ;; initially NIL so that FIND-INITIAL-DFO doesn't have to scan the
237 ;; entire initial component just to clear the flags.
239 ;; some kind of info used by the back end
241 ;; constraints that hold in this block and its successors by merit
242 ;; of being tested by its IF predecessors.
243 (test-constraint nil :type (or sset null)))
244 (def!method print-object ((cblock cblock) stream)
245 (print-unreadable-object (cblock stream :type t :identity t)
246 (format stream "~W :START c~W"
247 (block-number cblock)
248 (cont-num (block-start cblock)))))
250 ;;; The BLOCK-ANNOTATION class is inherited (via :INCLUDE) by
251 ;;; different BLOCK-INFO annotation structures so that code
252 ;;; (specifically control analysis) can be shared.
253 (defstruct (block-annotation (:constructor nil)
255 ;; The IR1 block that this block is in the INFO for.
256 (block (missing-arg) :type cblock)
257 ;; the next and previous block in emission order (not DFO). This
258 ;; determines which block we drop though to, and is also used to
259 ;; chain together overflow blocks that result from splitting of IR2
260 ;; blocks in lifetime analysis.
261 (next nil :type (or block-annotation null))
262 (prev nil :type (or block-annotation null)))
264 ;;; A COMPONENT structure provides a handle on a connected piece of
265 ;;; the flow graph. Most of the passes in the compiler operate on
266 ;;; COMPONENTs rather than on the entire flow graph.
268 ;;; According to the CMU CL internals/front.tex, the reason for
269 ;;; separating compilation into COMPONENTs is
270 ;;; to increase the efficiency of large block compilations. In
271 ;;; addition to improving locality of reference and reducing the
272 ;;; size of flow analysis problems, this allows back-end data
273 ;;; structures to be reclaimed after the compilation of each
275 (defstruct (component (:copier nil)
277 make-component (head tail &aux (last-block tail))))
278 ;; unique ID for debugging
279 #!+sb-show (id (new-object-id) :read-only t)
280 ;; the kind of component
282 ;; (The terminology here is left over from before
283 ;; sbcl-0.pre7.34.flaky5.2, when there was no such thing as
284 ;; FUNCTIONAL-HAS-EXTERNAL-REFERENCES-P, so that Python was
285 ;; incapable of building standalone :EXTERNAL functions, but instead
286 ;; had to implement things like #'CL:COMPILE as FUNCALL of a little
287 ;; toplevel stub whose sole purpose was to return an :EXTERNAL
290 ;; The possibilities are:
292 ;; an ordinary component, containing non-top-level code
294 ;; a component containing only load-time code
296 ;; In the old system, before FUNCTIONAL-HAS-EXTERNAL-REFERENCES-P
297 ;; was defined, this was necessarily a component containing both
298 ;; top level and run-time code. Now this state is also used for
299 ;; a component with HAS-EXTERNAL-REFERENCES-P functionals in it.
301 ;; the result of initial IR1 conversion, on which component
302 ;; analysis has not been done
304 ;; debris left over from component analysis
306 ;; See also COMPONENT-TOPLEVELISH-P.
307 (kind nil :type (member nil :toplevel :complex-toplevel :initial :deleted))
308 ;; the blocks that are the dummy head and tail of the DFO
310 ;; Entry/exit points have these blocks as their
311 ;; predecessors/successors. The start and return from each
312 ;; non-deleted function is linked to the component head and
313 ;; tail. Until physical environment analysis links NLX entry stubs
314 ;; to the component head, every successor of the head is a function
315 ;; start (i.e. begins with a BIND node.)
316 (head (missing-arg) :type cblock)
317 (tail (missing-arg) :type cblock)
318 ;; New blocks are inserted before this.
319 (last-block (missing-arg) :type cblock)
320 ;; This becomes a list of the CLAMBDA structures for all functions
321 ;; in this component. OPTIONAL-DISPATCHes are represented only by
322 ;; their XEP and other associated lambdas. This doesn't contain any
323 ;; deleted or LET lambdas.
325 ;; Note that logical associations between CLAMBDAs and COMPONENTs
326 ;; seem to exist for a while before this is initialized. See e.g.
327 ;; the NEW-FUNCTIONALS slot. In particular, I got burned by writing
328 ;; some code to use this value to decide which components need
329 ;; LOCALL-ANALYZE-COMPONENT, when it turns out that
330 ;; LOCALL-ANALYZE-COMPONENT had a role in initializing this value
331 ;; (and DFO stuff does too, maybe). Also, even after it's
332 ;; initialized, it might change as CLAMBDAs are deleted or merged.
334 (lambdas () :type list)
335 ;; a list of FUNCTIONALs for functions that are newly converted, and
336 ;; haven't been local-call analyzed yet. Initially functions are not
337 ;; in the LAMBDAS list. Local call analysis moves them there
338 ;; (possibly as LETs, or implicitly as XEPs if an OPTIONAL-DISPATCH.)
339 ;; Between runs of local call analysis there may be some debris of
340 ;; converted or even deleted functions in this list.
341 (new-functionals () :type list)
342 ;; If this is true, then there is stuff in this component that could
343 ;; benefit from further IR1 optimization.
344 (reoptimize t :type boolean)
345 ;; If this is true, then the control flow in this component was
346 ;; messed up by IR1 optimizations, so the DFO should be recomputed.
347 (reanalyze nil :type boolean)
348 ;; some sort of name for the code in this component
349 (name "<unknown>" :type simple-string)
350 ;; When I am a child, this is :NO-IR2-YET.
351 ;; In my adulthood, IR2 stores notes to itself here.
352 ;; After I have left the great wheel and am staring into the GC, this
353 ;; is set to :DEAD to indicate that it's a gruesome error to operate
354 ;; on me (e.g. by using me as *CURRENT-COMPONENT*, or by pushing
355 ;; LAMBDAs onto my NEW-FUNCTIONALS, as in sbcl-0.pre7.115).
356 (info :no-ir2-yet :type (or ir2-component (member :no-ir2-yet :dead)))
357 ;; the SOURCE-INFO structure describing where this component was
359 (source-info *source-info* :type source-info)
360 ;; count of the number of inline expansions we have done while
361 ;; compiling this component, to detect infinite or exponential
363 (inline-expansions 0 :type index)
364 ;; a map from combination nodes to things describing how an
365 ;; optimization of the node failed. The description is an alist
366 ;; (TRANSFORM . ARGS), where TRANSFORM is the structure describing
367 ;; the transform that failed, and ARGS is either a list of format
368 ;; arguments for the note, or the FUN-TYPE that would have
369 ;; enabled the transformation but failed to match.
370 (failed-optimizations (make-hash-table :test 'eq) :type hash-table)
371 ;; This is similar to NEW-FUNCTIONALS, but is used when a function
372 ;; has already been analyzed, but new references have been added by
373 ;; inline expansion. Unlike NEW-FUNCTIONALS, this is not disjoint
374 ;; from COMPONENT-LAMBDAS.
375 (reanalyze-functionals nil :type list)
376 (delete-blocks nil :type list))
377 (defprinter (component :identity t)
380 (reanalyze :test reanalyze))
382 ;;; Check that COMPONENT is suitable for roles which involve adding
383 ;;; new code. (gotta love imperative programming with lotso in-place
385 (defun aver-live-component (component)
386 ;; FIXME: As of sbcl-0.pre7.115, we're asserting that
387 ;; COMPILE-COMPONENT hasn't happened yet. Might it be even better
388 ;; (certainly stricter, possibly also correct...) to assert that
389 ;; IR1-FINALIZE hasn't happened yet?
390 (aver (not (eql (component-info component) :dead))))
392 ;;; Before sbcl-0.7.0, there were :TOPLEVEL things which were magical
393 ;;; in multiple ways. That's since been refactored into the orthogonal
394 ;;; properties "optimized for locall with no arguments" and "externally
395 ;;; visible/referenced (so don't delete it)". The code <0.7.0 did a lot
396 ;;; of tests a la (EQ KIND :TOP_LEVEL) in the "don't delete it?" sense;
397 ;;; this function is a sort of literal translation of those tests into
400 ;;; FIXME: After things settle down, bare :TOPLEVEL might go away, at
401 ;;; which time it might be possible to replace the COMPONENT-KIND
402 ;;; :TOPLEVEL mess with a flag COMPONENT-HAS-EXTERNAL-REFERENCES-P
403 ;;; along the lines of FUNCTIONAL-HAS-EXTERNAL-REFERENCES-P.
404 (defun lambda-toplevelish-p (clambda)
405 (or (eql (lambda-kind clambda) :toplevel)
406 (lambda-has-external-references-p clambda)))
407 (defun component-toplevelish-p (component)
408 (member (component-kind component)
409 '(:toplevel :complex-toplevel)))
411 ;;; A CLEANUP structure represents some dynamic binding action. Blocks
412 ;;; are annotated with the current CLEANUP so that dynamic bindings
413 ;;; can be removed when control is transferred out of the binding
414 ;;; environment. We arrange for changes in dynamic bindings to happen
415 ;;; at block boundaries, so that cleanup code may easily be inserted.
416 ;;; The "mess-up" action is explicitly represented by a funny function
417 ;;; call or ENTRY node.
419 ;;; We guarantee that CLEANUPs only need to be done at block
420 ;;; boundaries by requiring that the exit ctrans initially head their
421 ;;; blocks, and then by not merging blocks when there is a cleanup
423 (defstruct (cleanup (:copier nil))
424 ;; the kind of thing that has to be cleaned up
426 :type (member :special-bind :catch :unwind-protect :block :tagbody))
427 ;; the node that messes things up. This is the last node in the
428 ;; non-messed-up environment. Null only temporarily. This could be
429 ;; deleted due to unreachability.
430 (mess-up nil :type (or node null))
431 ;; a list of all the NLX-INFO structures whose NLX-INFO-CLEANUP is
432 ;; this cleanup. This is filled in by physical environment analysis.
433 (nlx-info nil :type list))
434 (defprinter (cleanup :identity t)
437 (nlx-info :test nlx-info))
439 ;;; A PHYSENV represents the result of physical environment analysis.
441 ;;; As far as I can tell from reverse engineering, this IR1 structure
442 ;;; represents the physical environment (which is probably not the
443 ;;; standard Lispy term for this concept, but I dunno what is the
444 ;;; standard term): those things in the lexical environment which a
445 ;;; LAMBDA actually interacts with. Thus in
446 ;;; (DEFUN FROB-THINGS (THINGS)
447 ;;; (DOLIST (THING THINGS)
448 ;;; (BLOCK FROBBING-ONE-THING
449 ;;; (MAPCAR (LAMBDA (PATTERN)
450 ;;; (WHEN (FITS-P THING PATTERN)
451 ;;; (RETURN-FROM FROB-THINGS (LIST :FIT THING PATTERN))))
453 ;;; the variables THINGS, THING, and PATTERN and the block names
454 ;;; FROB-THINGS and FROBBING-ONE-THING are all in the inner LAMBDA's
455 ;;; lexical environment, but of those only THING, PATTERN, and
456 ;;; FROB-THINGS are in its physical environment. In IR1, we largely
457 ;;; just collect the names of these things; in IR2 an IR2-PHYSENV
458 ;;; structure is attached to INFO and used to keep track of
459 ;;; associations between these names and less-abstract things (like
460 ;;; TNs, or eventually stack slots and registers). -- WHN 2001-09-29
461 (defstruct (physenv (:copier nil))
462 ;; the function that allocates this physical environment
463 (lambda (missing-arg) :type clambda :read-only t)
464 ;; This ultimately converges to a list of all the LAMBDA-VARs and
465 ;; NLX-INFOs needed from enclosing environments by code in this
466 ;; physical environment. In the meantime, it may be
467 ;; * NIL at object creation time
468 ;; * a superset of the correct result, generated somewhat later
469 ;; * smaller and smaller sets converging to the correct result as
470 ;; we notice and delete unused elements in the superset
471 (closure nil :type list)
472 ;; a list of NLX-INFO structures describing all the non-local exits
473 ;; into this physical environment
474 (nlx-info nil :type list)
475 ;; some kind of info used by the back end
477 (defprinter (physenv :identity t)
479 (closure :test closure)
480 (nlx-info :test nlx-info))
482 ;;; An TAIL-SET structure is used to accumulate information about
483 ;;; tail-recursive local calls. The "tail set" is effectively the
484 ;;; transitive closure of the "is called tail-recursively by"
487 ;;; All functions in the same tail set share the same TAIL-SET
488 ;;; structure. Initially each function has its own TAIL-SET, but when
489 ;;; IR1-OPTIMIZE-RETURN notices a tail local call, it joins the tail
490 ;;; sets of the called function and the calling function.
492 ;;; The tail set is somewhat approximate, because it is too early to
493 ;;; be sure which calls will be tail-recursive. Any call that *might*
494 ;;; end up tail-recursive causes TAIL-SET merging.
495 (defstruct (tail-set)
496 ;; a list of all the LAMBDAs in this tail set
497 (funs nil :type list)
498 ;; our current best guess of the type returned by these functions.
499 ;; This is the union across all the functions of the return node's
500 ;; RESULT-TYPE, excluding local calls.
501 (type *wild-type* :type ctype)
502 ;; some info used by the back end
504 (defprinter (tail-set :identity t)
509 ;;; An NLX-INFO structure is used to collect various information about
510 ;;; non-local exits. This is effectively an annotation on the
511 ;;; continuation, although it is accessed by searching in the
512 ;;; PHYSENV-NLX-INFO.
513 (def!struct (nlx-info (:constructor make-nlx-info
514 (cleanup exit &aux (lvar (node-lvar exit))))
515 (:make-load-form-fun ignore-it))
516 ;; the cleanup associated with this exit. In a catch or
517 ;; unwind-protect, this is the :CATCH or :UNWIND-PROTECT cleanup,
518 ;; and not the cleanup for the escape block. The CLEANUP-KIND of
519 ;; this thus provides a good indication of what kind of exit is
521 (cleanup (missing-arg) :type cleanup)
522 ;; the continuation exited to (the CONT of the EXIT nodes). If this
523 ;; exit is from an escape function (CATCH or UNWIND-PROTECT), then
524 ;; physical environment analysis deletes the escape function and
525 ;; instead has the %NLX-ENTRY use this continuation.
527 ;; This slot is primarily an indication of where this exit delivers
528 ;; its values to (if any), but it is also used as a sort of name to
529 ;; allow us to find the NLX-INFO that corresponds to a given exit.
530 ;; For this purpose, the ENTRY must also be used to disambiguate,
531 ;; since exits to different places may deliver their result to the
532 ;; same continuation.
533 (exit (missing-arg) :type exit)
534 (lvar (missing-arg) :type (or lvar null))
535 ;; the entry stub inserted by physical environment analysis. This is
536 ;; a block containing a call to the %NLX-ENTRY funny function that
537 ;; has the original exit destination as its successor. Null only
539 (target nil :type (or cblock null))
540 ;; some kind of info used by the back end
542 (defprinter (nlx-info :identity t)
549 ;;; Variables, constants and functions are all represented by LEAF
550 ;;; structures. A reference to a LEAF is indicated by a REF node. This
551 ;;; allows us to easily substitute one for the other without actually
552 ;;; hacking the flow graph.
553 (def!struct (leaf (:make-load-form-fun ignore-it)
555 ;; unique ID for debugging
556 #!+sb-show (id (new-object-id) :read-only t)
557 ;; (For public access to this slot, use LEAF-SOURCE-NAME.)
559 ;; the name of LEAF as it appears in the source, e.g. 'FOO or '(SETF
560 ;; FOO) or 'N or '*Z*, or the special .ANONYMOUS. value if there's
561 ;; no name for this thing in the source (as can happen for
562 ;; FUNCTIONALs, e.g. for anonymous LAMBDAs or for functions for
563 ;; top-level forms; and can also happen for anonymous constants) or
564 ;; perhaps also if the match between the name and the thing is
565 ;; skewed enough (e.g. for macro functions or method functions) that
566 ;; we don't want to have that name affect compilation
568 ;; (We use .ANONYMOUS. here more or less the way we'd ordinarily use
569 ;; NIL, but we're afraid to use NIL because it's a symbol which could
570 ;; be the name of a leaf, if only the constant named NIL.)
572 ;; The value of this slot in can affect ordinary runtime behavior,
573 ;; e.g. of special variables and known functions, not just debugging.
575 ;; See also the LEAF-DEBUG-NAME function and the
576 ;; FUNCTIONAL-%DEBUG-NAME slot.
577 (%source-name (missing-arg)
578 :type (or symbol (and cons (satisfies legal-fun-name-p)))
580 ;; the type which values of this leaf must have
581 (type *universal-type* :type ctype)
582 ;; where the TYPE information came from:
583 ;; :DECLARED, from a declaration.
584 ;; :ASSUMED, from uses of the object.
585 ;; :DEFINED, from examination of the definition.
586 ;; FIXME: This should be a named type. (LEAF-WHERE-FROM? Or
587 ;; perhaps just WHERE-FROM, since it's not just used in LEAF,
588 ;; but also in various DEFINE-INFO-TYPEs in globaldb.lisp,
589 ;; and very likely elsewhere too.)
590 (where-from :assumed :type (member :declared :assumed :defined))
591 ;; list of the REF nodes for this leaf
593 ;; true if there was ever a REF or SET node for this leaf. This may
594 ;; be true when REFS and SETS are null, since code can be deleted.
595 (ever-used nil :type boolean)
596 ;; some kind of info used by the back end
599 ;;; LEAF name operations
601 ;;; KLUDGE: wants CLOS..
602 (defun leaf-has-source-name-p (leaf)
603 (not (eq (leaf-%source-name leaf)
605 (defun leaf-source-name (leaf)
606 (aver (leaf-has-source-name-p leaf))
607 (leaf-%source-name leaf))
608 (defun leaf-debug-name (leaf)
609 (if (functional-p leaf)
610 ;; FUNCTIONALs have additional %DEBUG-NAME behavior.
611 (functional-debug-name leaf)
612 ;; Other objects just use their source name.
614 ;; (As of sbcl-0.pre7.85, there are a few non-FUNCTIONAL
615 ;; anonymous objects, (anonymous constants..) and those would
616 ;; fail here if we ever tried to get debug names from them, but
617 ;; it looks as though it's never interesting to get debug names
618 ;; from them, so it's moot. -- WHN)
619 (leaf-source-name leaf)))
621 ;;; The CONSTANT structure is used to represent known constant values.
622 ;;; If NAME is not null, then it is the name of the named constant
623 ;;; which this leaf corresponds to, otherwise this is an anonymous
625 (def!struct (constant (:include leaf))
626 ;; the value of the constant
628 (defprinter (constant :identity t)
629 (%source-name :test %source-name)
632 ;;; The BASIC-VAR structure represents information common to all
633 ;;; variables which don't correspond to known local functions.
634 (def!struct (basic-var (:include leaf)
636 ;; Lists of the set nodes for this variable.
637 (sets () :type list))
639 ;;; The GLOBAL-VAR structure represents a value hung off of the symbol
641 (def!struct (global-var (:include basic-var))
642 ;; kind of variable described
644 :type (member :special :global-function :global)))
645 (defprinter (global-var :identity t)
648 (type :test (not (eq type *universal-type*)))
649 (where-from :test (not (eq where-from :assumed)))
652 ;;; A DEFINED-FUN represents a function that is defined in the same
653 ;;; compilation block, or that has an inline expansion, or that has a
654 ;;; non-NIL INLINEP value. Whenever we change the INLINEP state (i.e.
655 ;;; an inline proclamation) we copy the structure so that former
656 ;;; INLINEP values are preserved.
657 (def!struct (defined-fun (:include global-var
658 (where-from :defined)
659 (kind :global-function)))
660 ;; The values of INLINEP and INLINE-EXPANSION initialized from the
661 ;; global environment.
662 (inlinep nil :type inlinep)
663 (inline-expansion nil :type (or cons null))
664 ;; the block-local definition of this function (either because it
665 ;; was semi-inline, or because it was defined in this block). If
666 ;; this function is not an entry point, then this may be deleted or
667 ;; LET-converted. Null if we haven't converted the expansion yet.
668 (functional nil :type (or functional null)))
669 (defprinter (defined-fun :identity t)
673 (functional :test functional))
677 ;;; We default the WHERE-FROM and TYPE slots to :DEFINED and FUNCTION.
678 ;;; We don't normally manipulate function types for defined functions,
679 ;;; but if someone wants to know, an approximation is there.
680 (def!struct (functional (:include leaf
681 (%source-name '.anonymous.)
682 (where-from :defined)
683 (type (specifier-type 'function))))
684 ;; (For public access to this slot, use LEAF-DEBUG-NAME.)
686 ;; the name of FUNCTIONAL for debugging purposes, or NIL if we
687 ;; should just let the SOURCE-NAME fall through
689 ;; Unlike the SOURCE-NAME slot, this slot's value should never
690 ;; affect ordinary code behavior, only debugging/diagnostic behavior.
692 ;; Ha. Ah, the starry-eyed idealism of the writer of the above
693 ;; paragraph. FUNCTION-LAMBDA-EXPRESSION's behaviour, as of
694 ;; sbcl-0.7.11.x, differs if the name of the a function is a string
695 ;; or not, as if it is a valid function name then it can look for an
698 ;; The value of this slot can be anything, except that it shouldn't
699 ;; be a legal function name, since otherwise debugging gets
700 ;; confusing. (If a legal function name is a good name for the
701 ;; function, it should be in %SOURCE-NAME, and then we shouldn't
702 ;; need a %DEBUG-NAME.) In SBCL as of 0.pre7.87, it's always a
703 ;; string unless it's NIL, since that's how CMU CL represented debug
704 ;; names. However, eventually I (WHN) think it we should start using
705 ;; list values instead, since they have much nicer print properties
706 ;; (abbreviation, skipping package prefixes when unneeded, and
707 ;; renaming package prefixes when we do things like renaming SB!EXT
710 ;; E.g. for the function which implements (DEFUN FOO ...), we could
714 ;; for the function which implements the top level form
715 ;; (IN-PACKAGE :FOO) we could have
717 ;; %DEBUG-NAME="top level form (IN-PACKAGE :FOO)"
718 ;; for the function which implements FOO in
719 ;; (DEFUN BAR (...) (FLET ((FOO (...) ...)) ...))
722 ;; %DEBUG-NAME="FLET FOO in BAR"
723 ;; and for the function which implements FOO in
724 ;; (DEFMACRO FOO (...) ...)
726 ;; %SOURCE-NAME=FOO (or maybe .ANONYMOUS.?)
727 ;; %DEBUG-NAME="DEFMACRO FOO"
729 :type (or null (not (satisfies legal-fun-name-p)))
731 ;; some information about how this function is used. These values
735 ;; an ordinary function, callable using local call
738 ;; a lambda that is used in only one local call, and has in
739 ;; effect been substituted directly inline. The return node is
740 ;; deleted, and the result is computed with the actual result
741 ;; lvar for the call.
744 ;; Similar to :LET (as per FUNCTIONAL-LETLIKE-P), but the call
748 ;; similar to a LET (as per FUNCTIONAL-SOMEWHAT-LETLIKE-P), but
749 ;; can have other than one call as long as there is at most
750 ;; one non-tail call.
753 ;; a lambda that is an entry point for an OPTIONAL-DISPATCH.
754 ;; Similar to NIL, but requires greater caution, since local call
755 ;; analysis may create new references to this function. Also, the
756 ;; function cannot be deleted even if it has *no* references. The
757 ;; OPTIONAL-DISPATCH is in the LAMDBA-OPTIONAL-DISPATCH.
760 ;; an external entry point lambda. The function it is an entry
761 ;; for is in the ENTRY-FUN slot.
764 ;; a top level lambda, holding a compiled top level form.
765 ;; Compiled very much like NIL, but provides an indication of
766 ;; top level context. A :TOPLEVEL lambda should have *no*
767 ;; references. Its ENTRY-FUN is a self-pointer.
770 ;; After a component is compiled, we clobber any top level code
771 ;; references to its non-closure XEPs with dummy FUNCTIONAL
772 ;; structures having this kind. This prevents the retained
773 ;; top level code from holding onto the IR for the code it
778 ;; special functions used internally by CATCH and UNWIND-PROTECT.
779 ;; These are pretty much like a normal function (NIL), but are
780 ;; treated specially by local call analysis and stuff. Neither
781 ;; kind should ever be given an XEP even though they appear as
782 ;; args to funny functions. An :ESCAPE function is never actually
783 ;; called, and thus doesn't need to have code generated for it.
786 ;; This function has been found to be uncallable, and has been
787 ;; marked for deletion.
788 (kind nil :type (member nil :optional :deleted :external :toplevel
789 :escape :cleanup :let :mv-let :assignment
791 ;; Is this a function that some external entity (e.g. the fasl dumper)
792 ;; refers to, so that even when it appears to have no references, it
793 ;; shouldn't be deleted? In the old days (before
794 ;; sbcl-0.pre7.37.flaky5.2) this was sort of implicitly true when
795 ;; KIND was :TOPLEVEL. Now it must be set explicitly, both for
796 ;; :TOPLEVEL functions and for any other kind of functions that we
797 ;; want to dump or return from #'CL:COMPILE or whatever.
798 (has-external-references-p nil)
799 ;; In a normal function, this is the external entry point (XEP)
800 ;; lambda for this function, if any. Each function that is used
801 ;; other than in a local call has an XEP, and all of the
802 ;; non-local-call references are replaced with references to the
805 ;; In an XEP lambda (indicated by the :EXTERNAL kind), this is the
806 ;; function that the XEP is an entry-point for. The body contains
807 ;; local calls to all the actual entry points in the function. In a
808 ;; :TOPLEVEL lambda (which is its own XEP) this is a self-pointer.
810 ;; With all other kinds, this is null.
811 (entry-fun nil :type (or functional null))
812 ;; the value of any inline/notinline declaration for a local
813 ;; function (or NIL in any case if no inline expansion is available)
814 (inlinep nil :type inlinep)
815 ;; If we have a lambda that can be used as in inline expansion for
816 ;; this function, then this is it. If there is no source-level
817 ;; lambda corresponding to this function then this is null (but then
818 ;; INLINEP will always be NIL as well.)
819 (inline-expansion nil :type list)
820 ;; the lexical environment that the INLINE-EXPANSION should be converted in
821 (lexenv *lexenv* :type lexenv)
822 ;; the original function or macro lambda list, or :UNSPECIFIED if
823 ;; this is a compiler created function
824 (arg-documentation nil :type (or list (member :unspecified)))
825 ;; various rare miscellaneous info that drives code generation & stuff
826 (plist () :type list))
827 (defprinter (functional :identity t)
832 ;;; Is FUNCTIONAL LET-converted? (where we're indifferent to whether
833 ;;; it returns one value or multiple values)
834 (defun functional-letlike-p (functional)
835 (member (functional-kind functional)
838 ;;; Is FUNCTIONAL sorta LET-converted? (where even an :ASSIGNMENT counts)
840 ;;; FIXME: I (WHN) don't understand this one well enough to give a good
841 ;;; definition or even a good function name, it's just a literal copy
842 ;;; of a CMU CL idiom. Does anyone have a better name or explanation?
843 (defun functional-somewhat-letlike-p (functional)
844 (or (functional-letlike-p functional)
845 (eql (functional-kind functional) :assignment)))
847 ;;; FUNCTIONAL name operations
848 (defun functional-debug-name (functional)
849 ;; FUNCTIONAL-%DEBUG-NAME takes precedence over FUNCTIONAL-SOURCE-NAME
850 ;; here because we want different debug names for the functions in
851 ;; DEFUN FOO and FLET FOO even though they have the same source name.
852 (or (functional-%debug-name functional)
853 ;; Note that this will cause an error if the function is
854 ;; anonymous. In SBCL (as opposed to CMU CL) we make all
855 ;; FUNCTIONALs have debug names. The CMU CL code didn't bother
856 ;; in many FUNCTIONALs, especially those which were likely to be
857 ;; optimized away before the user saw them. However, getting
858 ;; that right requires a global understanding of the code,
859 ;; which seems bad, so we just require names for everything.
860 (leaf-source-name functional)))
862 ;;; The CLAMBDA only deals with required lexical arguments. Special,
863 ;;; optional, keyword and rest arguments are handled by transforming
864 ;;; into simpler stuff.
865 (def!struct (clambda (:include functional)
867 (:predicate lambda-p)
868 (:constructor make-lambda)
869 (:copier copy-lambda))
870 ;; list of LAMBDA-VAR descriptors for arguments
871 (vars nil :type list :read-only t)
872 ;; If this function was ever a :OPTIONAL function (an entry-point
873 ;; for an OPTIONAL-DISPATCH), then this is that OPTIONAL-DISPATCH.
874 ;; The optional dispatch will be :DELETED if this function is no
876 (optional-dispatch nil :type (or optional-dispatch null))
877 ;; the BIND node for this LAMBDA. This node marks the beginning of
878 ;; the lambda, and serves to explicitly represent the lambda binding
879 ;; semantics within the flow graph representation. This is null in
880 ;; deleted functions, and also in LETs where we deleted the call and
881 ;; bind (because there are no variables left), but have not yet
882 ;; actually deleted the LAMBDA yet.
883 (bind nil :type (or bind null))
884 ;; the RETURN node for this LAMBDA, or NIL if it has been
885 ;; deleted. This marks the end of the lambda, receiving the result
886 ;; of the body. In a LET, the return node is deleted, and the body
887 ;; delivers the value to the actual lvar. The return may also be
888 ;; deleted if it is unreachable.
889 (return nil :type (or creturn null))
890 ;; If this CLAMBDA is a LET, then this slot holds the LAMBDA whose
891 ;; LETS list we are in, otherwise it is a self-pointer.
892 (home nil :type (or clambda null))
893 ;; all the lambdas that have been LET-substituted in this lambda.
894 ;; This is only non-null in lambdas that aren't LETs.
895 (lets nil :type list)
896 ;; all the ENTRY nodes in this function and its LETs, or null in a LET
897 (entries nil :type list)
898 ;; CLAMBDAs which are locally called by this lambda, and other
899 ;; objects (closed-over LAMBDA-VARs and XEPs) which this lambda
900 ;; depends on in such a way that DFO shouldn't put them in separate
902 (calls-or-closes nil :type list)
903 ;; the TAIL-SET that this LAMBDA is in. This is null during creation.
905 ;; In CMU CL, and old SBCL, this was also NILed out when LET
906 ;; conversion happened. That caused some problems, so as of
907 ;; sbcl-0.pre7.37.flaky5.2 when I was trying to get the compiler to
908 ;; emit :EXTERNAL functions directly, and so now the value
909 ;; is no longer NILed out in LET conversion, but instead copied
910 ;; (so that any further optimizations on the rest of the tail
911 ;; set won't modify the value) if necessary.
912 (tail-set nil :type (or tail-set null))
913 ;; the structure which represents the phsical environment that this
914 ;; function's variables are allocated in. This is filled in by
915 ;; physical environment analysis. In a LET, this is EQ to our home's
916 ;; physical environment.
917 (physenv nil :type (or physenv null))
918 ;; In a LET, this is the NODE-LEXENV of the combination node. We
919 ;; retain it so that if the LET is deleted (due to a lack of vars),
920 ;; we will still have caller's lexenv to figure out which cleanup is
922 (call-lexenv nil :type (or lexenv null))
923 ;; list of embedded lambdas
924 (children nil :type list)
925 (parent nil :type (or clambda null)))
926 (defprinter (clambda :conc-name lambda- :identity t)
931 (type :test (not (eq type *universal-type*)))
932 (where-from :test (not (eq where-from :assumed)))
933 (vars :prin1 (mapcar #'leaf-source-name vars)))
935 ;;; The OPTIONAL-DISPATCH leaf is used to represent hairy lambdas. It
936 ;;; is a FUNCTIONAL, like LAMBDA. Each legal number of arguments has a
937 ;;; function which is called when that number of arguments is passed.
938 ;;; The function is called with all the arguments actually passed. If
939 ;;; additional arguments are legal, then the LEXPR style MORE-ENTRY
940 ;;; handles them. The value returned by the function is the value
941 ;;; which results from calling the OPTIONAL-DISPATCH.
943 ;;; The theory is that each entry-point function calls the next entry
944 ;;; point tail-recursively, passing all the arguments passed in and
945 ;;; the default for the argument the entry point is for. The last
946 ;;; entry point calls the real body of the function. In the presence
947 ;;; of SUPPLIED-P args and other hair, things are more complicated. In
948 ;;; general, there is a distinct internal function that takes the
949 ;;; SUPPLIED-P args as parameters. The preceding entry point calls
950 ;;; this function with NIL filled in for the SUPPLIED-P args, while
951 ;;; the current entry point calls it with T in the SUPPLIED-P
954 ;;; Note that it is easy to turn a call with a known number of
955 ;;; arguments into a direct call to the appropriate entry-point
956 ;;; function, so functions that are compiled together can avoid doing
958 (def!struct (optional-dispatch (:include functional))
959 ;; the original parsed argument list, for anyone who cares
960 (arglist nil :type list)
961 ;; true if &ALLOW-OTHER-KEYS was supplied
962 (allowp nil :type boolean)
963 ;; true if &KEY was specified (which doesn't necessarily mean that
964 ;; there are any &KEY arguments..)
965 (keyp nil :type boolean)
966 ;; the number of required arguments. This is the smallest legal
967 ;; number of arguments.
968 (min-args 0 :type unsigned-byte)
969 ;; the total number of required and optional arguments. Args at
970 ;; positions >= to this are &REST, &KEY or illegal args.
971 (max-args 0 :type unsigned-byte)
972 ;; list of the (maybe delayed) LAMBDAs which are the entry points
973 ;; for non-rest, non-key calls. The entry for MIN-ARGS is first,
974 ;; MIN-ARGS+1 second, ... MAX-ARGS last. The last entry-point always
975 ;; calls the main entry; in simple cases it may be the main entry.
976 (entry-points nil :type list)
977 ;; an entry point which takes MAX-ARGS fixed arguments followed by
978 ;; an argument context pointer and an argument count. This entry
979 ;; point deals with listifying rest args and parsing keywords. This
980 ;; is null when extra arguments aren't legal.
981 (more-entry nil :type (or clambda null))
982 ;; the main entry-point into the function, which takes all arguments
983 ;; including keywords as fixed arguments. The format of the
984 ;; arguments must be determined by examining the arglist. This may
985 ;; be used by callers that supply at least MAX-ARGS arguments and
986 ;; know what they are doing.
987 (main-entry nil :type (or clambda null)))
988 (defprinter (optional-dispatch :identity t)
992 (type :test (not (eq type *universal-type*)))
993 (where-from :test (not (eq where-from :assumed)))
999 (entry-points :test entry-points)
1000 (more-entry :test more-entry)
1003 ;;; The ARG-INFO structure allows us to tack various information onto
1004 ;;; LAMBDA-VARs during IR1 conversion. If we use one of these things,
1005 ;;; then the var will have to be massaged a bit before it is simple
1007 (def!struct arg-info
1008 ;; true if this arg is to be specially bound
1009 (specialp nil :type boolean)
1010 ;; the kind of argument being described. Required args only have arg
1011 ;; info structures if they are special.
1013 :type (member :required :optional :keyword :rest
1014 :more-context :more-count))
1015 ;; If true, this is the VAR for SUPPLIED-P variable of a keyword or
1016 ;; optional arg. This is true for keywords with non-constant
1017 ;; defaults even when there is no user-specified supplied-p var.
1018 (supplied-p nil :type (or lambda-var null))
1019 ;; the default for a keyword or optional, represented as the
1020 ;; original Lisp code. This is set to NIL in &KEY arguments that are
1021 ;; defaulted using the SUPPLIED-P arg.
1022 (default nil :type t)
1023 ;; the actual key for a &KEY argument. Note that in ANSI CL this is
1024 ;; not necessarily a keyword: (DEFUN FOO (&KEY ((BAR BAR))) ...).
1025 (key nil :type symbol))
1026 (defprinter (arg-info :identity t)
1027 (specialp :test specialp)
1029 (supplied-p :test supplied-p)
1030 (default :test default)
1033 ;;; The LAMBDA-VAR structure represents a lexical lambda variable.
1034 ;;; This structure is also used during IR1 conversion to describe
1035 ;;; lambda arguments which may ultimately turn out not to be simple
1038 ;;; LAMBDA-VARs with no REFs are considered to be deleted; physical
1039 ;;; environment analysis isn't done on these variables, so the back
1040 ;;; end must check for and ignore unreferenced variables. Note that a
1041 ;;; deleted LAMBDA-VAR may have sets; in this case the back end is
1042 ;;; still responsible for propagating the SET-VALUE to the set's CONT.
1043 (!def-boolean-attribute lambda-var
1044 ;; true if this variable has been declared IGNORE
1046 ;; This is set by physical environment analysis if it chooses an
1047 ;; indirect (value cell) representation for this variable because it
1048 ;; is both set and closed over.
1051 (def!struct (lambda-var (:include basic-var))
1052 (flags (lambda-var-attributes)
1054 ;; the CLAMBDA that this var belongs to. This may be null when we are
1055 ;; building a lambda during IR1 conversion.
1056 (home nil :type (or null clambda))
1057 ;; The following two slots are only meaningful during IR1 conversion
1058 ;; of hairy lambda vars:
1060 ;; The ARG-INFO structure which holds information obtained from
1061 ;; &keyword parsing.
1062 (arg-info nil :type (or arg-info null))
1063 ;; if true, the GLOBAL-VAR structure for the special variable which
1064 ;; is to be bound to the value of this argument
1065 (specvar nil :type (or global-var null))
1066 ;; Set of the CONSTRAINTs on this variable. Used by constraint
1067 ;; propagation. This is left null by the lambda pre-pass if it
1068 ;; determine that this is a set closure variable, and is thus not a
1069 ;; good subject for flow analysis.
1070 (constraints nil :type (or sset null)))
1071 (defprinter (lambda-var :identity t)
1074 (type :test (not (eq type *universal-type*)))
1075 (where-from :test (not (eq where-from :assumed)))
1076 (flags :test (not (zerop flags))
1077 :prin1 (decode-lambda-var-attributes flags))
1078 (arg-info :test arg-info)
1079 (specvar :test specvar))
1081 (defmacro lambda-var-ignorep (var)
1082 `(lambda-var-attributep (lambda-var-flags ,var) ignore))
1083 (defmacro lambda-var-indirect (var)
1084 `(lambda-var-attributep (lambda-var-flags ,var) indirect))
1086 ;;;; basic node types
1088 ;;; A REF represents a reference to a LEAF. REF-REOPTIMIZE is
1089 ;;; initially (and forever) NIL, since REFs don't receive any values
1090 ;;; and don't have any IR1 optimizer.
1091 (defstruct (ref (:include valued-node (reoptimize nil))
1092 (:constructor make-ref
1094 &aux (leaf-type (leaf-type leaf))
1096 (make-single-value-type leaf-type))))
1098 ;; The leaf referenced.
1099 (leaf nil :type leaf))
1100 (defprinter (ref :identity t)
1104 ;;; Naturally, the IF node always appears at the end of a block.
1105 (defstruct (cif (:include node)
1108 (:constructor make-if)
1110 ;; LVAR for the predicate
1111 (test (missing-arg) :type lvar)
1112 ;; the blocks that we execute next in true and false case,
1113 ;; respectively (may be the same)
1114 (consequent (missing-arg) :type cblock)
1115 (alternative (missing-arg) :type cblock))
1116 (defprinter (cif :conc-name if- :identity t)
1117 (test :prin1 (lvar-uses test))
1121 (defstruct (cset (:include valued-node
1122 (derived-type (make-single-value-type
1126 (:constructor make-set)
1128 ;; descriptor for the variable set
1129 (var (missing-arg) :type basic-var)
1130 ;; LVAR for the value form
1131 (value (missing-arg) :type lvar))
1132 (defprinter (cset :conc-name set- :identity t)
1134 (value :prin1 (lvar-uses value)))
1136 ;;; The BASIC-COMBINATION structure is used to represent both normal
1137 ;;; and multiple value combinations. In a let-like function call, this
1138 ;;; node appears at the end of its block and the body of the called
1139 ;;; function appears as the successor; the NODE-LVAR is null.
1140 (defstruct (basic-combination (:include valued-node)
1143 ;; LVAR for the function
1144 (fun (missing-arg) :type lvar)
1145 ;; list of LVARs for the args. In a local call, an argument lvar may
1146 ;; be replaced with NIL to indicate that the corresponding variable
1147 ;; is unreferenced, and thus no argument value need be passed.
1148 (args nil :type list)
1149 ;; the kind of function call being made. :LOCAL means that this is a
1150 ;; local call to a function in the same component, and that argument
1151 ;; syntax checking has been done, etc. Calls to known global
1152 ;; functions are represented by storing the FUN-INFO for the
1153 ;; function in this slot. :FULL is a call to an (as yet) unknown
1154 ;; function. :ERROR is like :FULL, but means that we have discovered
1155 ;; that the call contains an error, and should not be reconsidered
1156 ;; for optimization.
1157 (kind :full :type (or (member :local :full :error) fun-info))
1158 ;; some kind of information attached to this node by the back end
1161 ;;; The COMBINATION node represents all normal function calls,
1162 ;;; including FUNCALL. This is distinct from BASIC-COMBINATION so that
1163 ;;; an MV-COMBINATION isn't COMBINATION-P.
1164 (defstruct (combination (:include basic-combination)
1165 (:constructor make-combination (fun))
1167 (defprinter (combination :identity t)
1169 (fun :prin1 (lvar-uses fun))
1170 (args :prin1 (mapcar (lambda (x)
1176 ;;; An MV-COMBINATION is to MULTIPLE-VALUE-CALL as a COMBINATION is to
1177 ;;; FUNCALL. This is used to implement all the multiple-value
1178 ;;; receiving forms.
1179 (defstruct (mv-combination (:include basic-combination)
1180 (:constructor make-mv-combination (fun))
1182 (defprinter (mv-combination)
1183 (fun :prin1 (lvar-uses fun))
1184 (args :prin1 (mapcar #'lvar-uses args)))
1186 ;;; The BIND node marks the beginning of a lambda body and represents
1187 ;;; the creation and initialization of the variables.
1188 (defstruct (bind (:include node)
1190 ;; the lambda we are binding variables for. Null when we are
1191 ;; creating the LAMBDA during IR1 translation.
1192 (lambda nil :type (or clambda null)))
1196 ;;; The RETURN node marks the end of a lambda body. It collects the
1197 ;;; return values and represents the control transfer on return. This
1198 ;;; is also where we stick information used for TAIL-SET type
1200 (defstruct (creturn (:include node)
1201 (:conc-name return-)
1202 (:predicate return-p)
1203 (:constructor make-return)
1204 (:copier copy-return))
1205 ;; the lambda we are returning from. Null temporarily during
1207 (lambda nil :type (or clambda null))
1208 ;; the lvar which yields the value of the lambda
1209 (result (missing-arg) :type lvar)
1210 ;; the union of the node-derived-type of all uses of the result
1211 ;; other than by a local call, intersected with the result's
1212 ;; asserted-type. If there are no non-call uses, this is
1214 (result-type *wild-type* :type ctype))
1215 (defprinter (creturn :conc-name return- :identity t)
1219 ;;; The CAST node represents type assertions. The check for
1220 ;;; TYPE-TO-CHECK is performed and then the VALUE is declared to be of
1221 ;;; type ASSERTED-TYPE.
1222 (defstruct (cast (:include valued-node)
1223 (:constructor %make-cast))
1224 (asserted-type (missing-arg) :type ctype)
1225 (type-to-check (missing-arg) :type ctype)
1226 ;; an indication of what we have proven about how this type
1227 ;; assertion is satisfied:
1230 ;; No type check is necessary (VALUE type is a subtype of the TYPE-TO-CHECK.)
1233 ;; Type check will be performed by NODE-DEST.
1236 ;; A type check is needed.
1237 (%type-check t :type (member t :external nil))
1238 ;; the lvar which is checked
1239 (value (missing-arg) :type lvar))
1240 (defprinter (cast :identity t)
1246 ;;;; non-local exit support
1248 ;;;; In IR1, we insert special nodes to mark potentially non-local
1251 ;;; The ENTRY node serves to mark the start of the dynamic extent of a
1252 ;;; lexical exit. It is the mess-up node for the corresponding :ENTRY
1254 (defstruct (entry (:include node)
1256 ;; All of the EXIT nodes for potential non-local exits to this point.
1257 (exits nil :type list)
1258 ;; The cleanup for this entry. NULL only temporarily.
1259 (cleanup nil :type (or cleanup null)))
1260 (defprinter (entry :identity t)
1263 ;;; The EXIT node marks the place at which exit code would be emitted,
1264 ;;; if necessary. This is interposed between the uses of the exit
1265 ;;; continuation and the exit continuation's DEST. Instead of using
1266 ;;; the returned value being delivered directly to the exit
1267 ;;; continuation, it is delivered to our VALUE lvar. The original exit
1268 ;;; lvar is the exit node's LVAR.
1269 (defstruct (exit (:include valued-node)
1271 ;; the ENTRY node that this is an exit for. If null, this is a
1272 ;; degenerate exit. A degenerate exit is used to "fill" an empty
1273 ;; block (which isn't allowed in IR1.) In a degenerate exit, Value
1274 ;; is always also null.
1275 (entry nil :type (or entry null))
1276 ;; the lvar yielding the value we are to exit with. If NIL, then no
1277 ;; value is desired (as in GO).
1278 (value nil :type (or lvar null)))
1279 (defprinter (exit :identity t)
1282 (value :test value))
1284 ;;;; miscellaneous IR1 structures
1286 (defstruct (undefined-warning
1287 #-no-ansi-print-object
1288 (:print-object (lambda (x s)
1289 (print-unreadable-object (x s :type t)
1290 (prin1 (undefined-warning-name x) s))))
1292 ;; the name of the unknown thing
1293 (name nil :type (or symbol list))
1294 ;; the kind of reference to NAME
1295 (kind (missing-arg) :type (member :function :type :variable))
1296 ;; the number of times this thing was used
1297 (count 0 :type unsigned-byte)
1298 ;; a list of COMPILER-ERROR-CONTEXT structures describing places
1299 ;; where this thing was used. Note that we only record the first
1300 ;; *UNDEFINED-WARNING-LIMIT* calls.
1301 (warnings () :type list))
1303 ;;; a helper for the POLICY macro, defined late here so that the
1304 ;;; various type tests can be inlined
1305 (declaim (ftype (function ((or list lexenv node functional)) list)
1307 (defun %coerce-to-policy (thing)
1308 (let ((result (etypecase thing
1310 (lexenv (lexenv-policy thing))
1311 (node (lexenv-policy (node-lexenv thing)))
1312 (functional (lexenv-policy (functional-lexenv thing))))))
1313 ;; Test the first element of the list as a rudimentary sanity
1314 ;; that it really does look like a valid policy.
1315 (aver (or (null result) (policy-quality-name-p (caar result))))
1319 ;;;; Freeze some structure types to speed type testing.
1322 (declaim (freeze-type node leaf lexenv ctran lvar cblock component cleanup
1323 physenv tail-set nlx-info))