1 ;;;; optimizers for list and sequence functions
3 ;;;; This software is part of the SBCL system. See the README file for
6 ;;;; This software is derived from the CMU CL system, which was
7 ;;;; written at Carnegie Mellon University and released into the
8 ;;;; public domain. The software is in the public domain and is
9 ;;;; provided with absolutely no warranty. See the COPYING and CREDITS
10 ;;;; files for more information.
14 ;;;; mapping onto lists: the MAPFOO functions
16 (defun mapfoo-transform (fn arglists accumulate take-car)
17 (collect ((do-clauses)
20 (let ((n-first (gensym)))
21 (dolist (a (if accumulate
23 `(,n-first ,@(rest arglists))))
25 (do-clauses `(,v ,a (cdr ,v)))
27 (args-to-fn (if take-car `(car ,v) v))))
29 (let* ((fn-sym (gensym)) ; for ONCE-ONLY-ish purposes
30 (call `(%funcall ,fn-sym . ,(args-to-fn)))
31 (endtest `(or ,@(tests))))
33 `(let ((,fn-sym (%coerce-callable-to-fun ,fn)))
37 (map-result (gensym)))
38 `(let ((,map-result (list nil)))
39 (do-anonymous ((,temp ,map-result) . ,(do-clauses))
40 (,endtest (cdr ,map-result))
41 (setq ,temp (last (nconc ,temp ,call)))))))
44 (map-result (gensym)))
45 `(let ((,map-result (list nil)))
46 (do-anonymous ((,temp ,map-result) . ,(do-clauses))
47 (,endtest (truly-the list (cdr ,map-result)))
48 (rplacd ,temp (setq ,temp (list ,call)))))))
50 `(let ((,n-first ,(first arglists)))
51 (do-anonymous ,(do-clauses)
52 (,endtest (truly-the list ,n-first))
55 (define-source-transform mapc (function list &rest more-lists)
56 (mapfoo-transform function (cons list more-lists) nil t))
58 (define-source-transform mapcar (function list &rest more-lists)
59 (mapfoo-transform function (cons list more-lists) :list t))
61 (define-source-transform mapcan (function list &rest more-lists)
62 (mapfoo-transform function (cons list more-lists) :nconc t))
64 (define-source-transform mapl (function list &rest more-lists)
65 (mapfoo-transform function (cons list more-lists) nil nil))
67 (define-source-transform maplist (function list &rest more-lists)
68 (mapfoo-transform function (cons list more-lists) :list nil))
70 (define-source-transform mapcon (function list &rest more-lists)
71 (mapfoo-transform function (cons list more-lists) :nconc nil))
73 ;;;; mapping onto sequences: the MAP function
75 ;;; MAP is %MAP plus a check to make sure that any length specified in
76 ;;; the result type matches the actual result. We also wrap it in a
77 ;;; TRULY-THE for the most specific type we can determine.
78 (deftransform map ((result-type-arg fun seq &rest seqs) * * :node node)
79 (let* ((seq-names (make-gensym-list (1+ (length seqs))))
80 (bare `(%map result-type-arg fun ,@seq-names))
81 (constant-result-type-arg-p (constant-lvar-p result-type-arg))
82 ;; what we know about the type of the result. (Note that the
83 ;; "result type" argument is not necessarily the type of the
84 ;; result, since NIL means the result has NULL type.)
85 (result-type (if (not constant-result-type-arg-p)
87 (let ((result-type-arg-value
88 (lvar-value result-type-arg)))
89 (if (null result-type-arg-value)
91 result-type-arg-value)))))
92 `(lambda (result-type-arg fun ,@seq-names)
93 (truly-the ,result-type
94 ,(cond ((policy node (< safety 3))
95 ;; ANSI requires the length-related type check only
96 ;; when the SAFETY quality is 3... in other cases, we
97 ;; skip it, because it could be expensive.
99 ((not constant-result-type-arg-p)
100 `(sequence-of-checked-length-given-type ,bare
103 (let ((result-ctype (ir1-transform-specifier-type
105 (if (array-type-p result-ctype)
106 (let ((dims (array-type-dimensions result-ctype)))
107 (unless (and (listp dims) (= (length dims) 1))
108 (give-up-ir1-transform "invalid sequence type"))
109 (let ((dim (first dims)))
112 `(vector-of-checked-length-given-length ,bare
114 ;; FIXME: this is wrong, as not all subtypes of
115 ;; VECTOR are ARRAY-TYPEs [consider, for
116 ;; example, (OR (VECTOR T 3) (VECTOR T
117 ;; 4))]. However, it's difficult to see what we
118 ;; should put here... maybe we should
119 ;; GIVE-UP-IR1-TRANSFORM if the type is a
120 ;; subtype of VECTOR but not an ARRAY-TYPE?
123 ;;; Return a DO loop, mapping a function FUN to elements of
124 ;;; sequences. SEQS is a list of lvars, SEQ-NAMES - list of variables,
125 ;;; bound to sequences, INTO - a variable, which is used in
126 ;;; MAP-INTO. RESULT and BODY are forms, which can use variables
127 ;;; FUNCALL-RESULT, containing the result of application of FUN, and
128 ;;; INDEX, containing the current position in sequences.
129 (defun build-sequence-iterator (seqs seq-names &key result into body)
130 (declare (type list seqs seq-names)
137 (let ((found-vector-p nil))
138 (flet ((process-vector (length)
139 (unless found-vector-p
140 (setq found-vector-p t)
141 (bindings `(index 0 (1+ index)))
142 (declarations `(type index index)))
143 (vector-lengths length)))
144 (loop for seq of-type lvar in seqs
145 for seq-name in seq-names
146 for type = (lvar-type seq)
147 do (cond ((csubtypep type (specifier-type 'list))
148 (with-unique-names (index)
149 (bindings `(,index ,seq-name (cdr ,index)))
150 (declarations `(type list ,index))
151 (places `(car ,index))
152 (tests `(endp ,index))))
153 ((csubtypep type (specifier-type 'vector))
154 (process-vector `(length ,seq-name))
155 (places `(locally (declare (optimize (insert-array-bounds-checks 0)))
156 (aref ,seq-name index))))
158 (give-up-ir1-transform
159 "can't determine sequence argument type"))))
161 (process-vector `(array-dimension ,into 0))))
163 (bindings `(length (min ,@(vector-lengths))))
164 (tests `(>= index length)))
166 ((or ,@(tests)) ,result)
167 (declare ,@(declarations))
168 (let ((funcall-result (funcall fun ,@(places))))
169 (declare (ignorable funcall-result))
172 ;;; Try to compile %MAP efficiently when we can determine sequence
173 ;;; argument types at compile time.
175 ;;; Note: This transform was written to allow open coding of
176 ;;; quantifiers by expressing them in terms of (MAP NIL ..). For
177 ;;; non-NIL values of RESULT-TYPE, it's still useful, but not
178 ;;; necessarily as efficient as possible. In particular, it will be
179 ;;; inefficient when RESULT-TYPE is a SIMPLE-ARRAY with specialized
180 ;;; numeric element types. It should be straightforward to make it
181 ;;; handle that case more efficiently, but it's left as an exercise to
182 ;;; the reader, because the code is complicated enough already and I
183 ;;; don't happen to need that functionality right now. -- WHN 20000410
184 (deftransform %map ((result-type fun seq &rest seqs) * *
185 :policy (>= speed space))
187 (unless (constant-lvar-p result-type)
188 (give-up-ir1-transform "RESULT-TYPE argument not constant"))
189 (labels ( ;; 1-valued SUBTYPEP, fails unless second value of SUBTYPEP is true
190 (fn-1subtypep (fn x y)
191 (multiple-value-bind (subtype-p valid-p) (funcall fn x y)
194 (give-up-ir1-transform
195 "can't analyze sequence type relationship"))))
196 (1subtypep (x y) (fn-1subtypep #'sb!xc:subtypep x y)))
197 (let* ((result-type-value (lvar-value result-type))
198 (result-supertype (cond ((null result-type-value) 'null)
199 ((1subtypep result-type-value 'vector)
201 ((1subtypep result-type-value 'list)
204 (give-up-ir1-transform
205 "result type unsuitable")))))
206 (cond ((and result-type-value (null seqs))
207 ;; The consing arity-1 cases can be implemented
208 ;; reasonably efficiently as function calls, and the cost
209 ;; of consing should be significantly larger than
210 ;; function call overhead, so we always compile these
211 ;; cases as full calls regardless of speed-versus-space
212 ;; optimization policy.
213 (cond ((subtypep result-type-value 'list)
214 '(%map-to-list-arity-1 fun seq))
215 ( ;; (This one can be inefficient due to COERCE, but
216 ;; the current open-coded implementation has the
218 (subtypep result-type-value 'vector)
219 `(coerce (%map-to-simple-vector-arity-1 fun seq)
220 ',result-type-value))
221 (t (bug "impossible (?) sequence type"))))
223 (let* ((seqs (cons seq seqs))
224 (seq-args (make-gensym-list (length seqs))))
225 (multiple-value-bind (push-dacc result)
226 (ecase result-supertype
227 (null (values nil nil))
228 (list (values `(push funcall-result acc)
230 (vector (values `(push funcall-result acc)
231 `(coerce (nreverse acc)
232 ',result-type-value))))
233 ;; (We use the same idiom, of returning a LAMBDA from
234 ;; DEFTRANSFORM, as is used in the DEFTRANSFORMs for
235 ;; FUNCALL and ALIEN-FUNCALL, and for the same
236 ;; reason: we need to get the runtime values of each
237 ;; of the &REST vars.)
238 `(lambda (result-type fun ,@seq-args)
239 (declare (ignore result-type))
240 (let ((fun (%coerce-callable-to-fun fun))
242 (declare (type list acc))
243 (declare (ignorable acc))
244 ,(build-sequence-iterator
247 :body push-dacc))))))))))
250 (deftransform map-into ((result fun &rest seqs)
254 (let ((seqs-names (mapcar (lambda (x)
258 `(lambda (result fun ,@seqs-names)
259 ,(build-sequence-iterator
261 :result '(when (array-has-fill-pointer-p result)
262 (setf (fill-pointer result) index))
264 :body '(locally (declare (optimize (insert-array-bounds-checks 0)))
265 (setf (aref result index) funcall-result)))
269 ;;; FIXME: once the confusion over doing transforms with known-complex
270 ;;; arrays is over, we should also transform the calls to (AND (ARRAY
271 ;;; * (*)) (NOT (SIMPLE-ARRAY * (*)))) objects.
272 (deftransform elt ((s i) ((simple-array * (*)) *) *)
275 (deftransform elt ((s i) (list *) * :policy (< safety 3))
278 (deftransform %setelt ((s i v) ((simple-array * (*)) * *) *)
281 (deftransform %setelt ((s i v) (list * *) * :policy (< safety 3))
282 '(setf (car (nthcdr i s)) v))
284 (deftransform %check-vector-sequence-bounds ((vector start end)
287 (if (policy node (= 0 insert-array-bounds-checks))
288 '(or end (length vector))
289 '(let ((length (length vector)))
290 (if (<= 0 start (or end length) length)
292 (sequence-bounding-indices-bad-error vector start end)))))
294 (defun specialized-list-seek-function-name (function-name key-functions variant)
295 (or (find-symbol (with-output-to-string (s)
296 ;; Write "%NAME-FUN1-FUN2-FUN3", etc. Not only is
297 ;; this ever so slightly faster then FORMAT, this
298 ;; way we are also proof against *PRINT-CASE*
299 ;; frobbing and such.
301 (write-string (symbol-name function-name) s)
302 (dolist (f key-functions)
304 (write-string (symbol-name f) s))
307 (write-string (symbol-name variant) s)))
308 (load-time-value (find-package "SB!KERNEL")))
309 (bug "Unknown list item seek transform: name=~S, key-functions=~S variant=~S"
310 function-name key-functions variant)))
312 (defun transform-list-item-seek (name item list key test test-not node)
313 ;; If TEST is EQL, drop it.
314 (when (and test (lvar-for-named-function test 'eql))
316 ;; Ditto for KEY IDENTITY.
317 (when (and key (lvar-for-named-function key 'identity))
319 ;; Key can legally be NIL, but if it's NIL for sure we pretend it's
320 ;; not there at all. If it might be NIL, make up a form to that
321 ;; ensures it is a function.
322 (multiple-value-bind (key key-form)
324 (let ((key-type (lvar-type key))
325 (null-type (specifier-type 'null)))
326 (cond ((csubtypep key-type null-type)
328 ((csubtypep null-type key-type)
330 (%coerce-callable-to-fun key)
333 (values key '(%coerce-callable-to-fun key))))))
334 (let* ((c-test (cond ((and test (lvar-for-named-function test 'eq))
337 ((and (not test) (not test-not))
338 (when (eq-comparable-type-p (lvar-type item))
340 (funs (remove nil (list (and key 'key) (cond (test 'test)
341 (test-not 'test-not)))))
342 (target-expr (if key '(%funcall key target) 'target))
343 (test-expr (cond (test `(%funcall test item ,target-expr))
344 (test-not `(not (%funcall test-not item ,target-expr)))
345 (c-test `(,c-test item ,target-expr))
346 (t `(eql item ,target-expr)))))
347 (labels ((open-code (tail)
349 `(if (let ((this ',(car tail)))
352 `(and this (let ((target (car this)))
355 `(let ((target this))
360 ,(open-code (cdr tail)))))
364 `(%coerce-callable-to-fun ,fun))))
365 (let* ((cp (constant-lvar-p list))
366 (c-list (when cp (lvar-value list))))
367 (cond ((and cp c-list (policy node (>= speed space)))
368 `(let ,(mapcar (lambda (fun) `(,fun ,(ensure-fun fun))) funs)
369 ,(open-code c-list)))
370 ((and cp (not c-list))
371 ;; constant nil list -- nothing to find!
374 ;; specialized out-of-line version
375 `(,(specialized-list-seek-function-name name funs c-test)
376 item list ,@(mapcar #'ensure-fun funs)))))))))
378 (deftransform member ((item list &key key test test-not) * * :node node)
379 (transform-list-item-seek 'member item list key test test-not node))
381 (deftransform assoc ((item list &key key test test-not) * * :node node)
382 (transform-list-item-seek 'assoc item list key test test-not node))
384 (deftransform memq ((item list) (t (constant-arg list)))
387 `(if (eq item ',(car tail))
391 (rec (lvar-value list))))
393 ;;; A similar transform used to apply to MEMBER and ASSOC, but since
394 ;;; TRANSFORM-LIST-ITEM-SEEK now takes care of them those transform
395 ;;; would never fire, and (%MEMBER-TEST ITEM LIST #'EQ) should be
396 ;;; almost as fast as MEMQ.
397 (deftransform delete ((item list &key test) (t list &rest t) *)
399 ;; FIXME: The scope of this transformation could be
400 ;; widened somewhat, letting it work whenever the test is
401 ;; 'EQL and we know from the type of ITEM that it #'EQ
402 ;; works like #'EQL on it. (E.g. types FIXNUM, CHARACTER,
404 ;; If TEST is EQ, apply transform, else
405 ;; if test is not EQL, then give up on transform, else
406 ;; if ITEM is not a NUMBER or is a FIXNUM, apply
407 ;; transform, else give up on transform.
409 (unless (lvar-fun-is test '(eq))
410 (give-up-ir1-transform)))
411 ((types-equal-or-intersect (lvar-type item)
412 (specifier-type 'number))
413 (give-up-ir1-transform "Item might be a number.")))
416 (deftransform delete-if ((pred list) (t list))
418 '(do ((x list (cdr x))
421 (cond ((funcall pred (car x))
424 (rplacd splice (cdr x))))
425 (t (setq splice x)))))
427 (deftransform fill ((seq item &key (start 0) (end nil))
428 (list t &key (:start t) (:end t)))
429 '(list-fill* seq item start end))
431 (deftransform fill ((seq item &key (start 0) (end nil))
432 (vector t &key (:start t) (:end t))
435 (let ((type (lvar-type seq))
436 (element-type (type-specifier (extract-upgraded-element-type seq))))
437 (cond ((and (neq '* element-type) (policy node (> speed space)))
439 `(with-array-data ((data seq)
442 :check-fill-pointer t)
443 (declare (type (simple-array ,element-type 1) data))
444 (declare (type index start end))
445 ;; WITH-ARRAY-DATA did our range checks once and for all, so
446 ;; it'd be wasteful to check again on every AREF...
447 (declare (optimize (safety 0) (speed 3)))
448 (do ((i start (1+ i)))
450 (declare (type index i))
451 (setf (aref data i) item)))
452 ;; ... though we still need to check that the new element can fit
453 ;; into the vector in safe code. -- CSR, 2002-07-05
454 `((declare (type ,element-type item)))))
455 ((csubtypep type (specifier-type 'string))
456 '(string-fill* seq item start end))
458 '(vector-fill* seq item start end)))))
460 (deftransform fill ((seq item &key (start 0) (end nil))
461 ((and sequence (not vector) (not list)) t &key (:start t) (:end t)))
462 `(sb!sequence:fill seq item
464 :end (%check-generic-sequence-bounds seq start end)))
468 ;;; Return true if LVAR's only use is a non-NOTINLINE reference to a
469 ;;; global function with one of the specified NAMES.
470 (defun lvar-fun-is (lvar names)
471 (declare (type lvar lvar) (list names))
472 (let ((use (lvar-uses lvar)))
474 (let ((leaf (ref-leaf use)))
475 (and (global-var-p leaf)
476 (eq (global-var-kind leaf) :global-function)
477 (not (null (member (leaf-source-name leaf) names
478 :test #'equal))))))))
480 ;;; If LVAR is a constant lvar, the return the constant value. If it
481 ;;; is null, then return default, otherwise quietly give up the IR1
484 ;;; ### Probably should take an ARG and flame using the NAME.
485 (defun constant-value-or-lose (lvar &optional default)
486 (declare (type (or lvar null) lvar))
487 (cond ((not lvar) default)
488 ((constant-lvar-p lvar)
491 (give-up-ir1-transform))))
494 ;;;; hairy sequence transforms
496 ;;; FIXME: no hairy sequence transforms in SBCL?
498 ;;; There used to be a bunch of commented out code about here,
499 ;;; containing the (apparent) beginning of hairy sequence transform
500 ;;; infrastructure. People interested in implementing better sequence
501 ;;; transforms might want to look at it for inspiration, even though
502 ;;; the actual code is ancient CMUCL -- and hence bitrotted. The code
503 ;;; was deleted in 1.0.7.23.
505 ;;;; string operations
507 ;;; We transform the case-sensitive string predicates into a non-keyword
508 ;;; version. This is an IR1 transform so that we don't have to worry about
509 ;;; changing the order of evaluation.
510 (macrolet ((def (fun pred*)
511 `(deftransform ,fun ((string1 string2 &key (start1 0) end1
514 `(,',pred* string1 string2 start1 end1 start2 end2))))
515 (def string< string<*)
516 (def string> string>*)
517 (def string<= string<=*)
518 (def string>= string>=*)
519 (def string= string=*)
520 (def string/= string/=*))
522 ;;; Return a form that tests the free variables STRING1 and STRING2
523 ;;; for the ordering relationship specified by LESSP and EQUALP. The
524 ;;; start and end are also gotten from the environment. Both strings
525 ;;; must be SIMPLE-BASE-STRINGs.
526 (macrolet ((def (name lessp equalp)
527 `(deftransform ,name ((string1 string2 start1 end1 start2 end2)
528 (simple-base-string simple-base-string t t t t) *)
529 `(let* ((end1 (if (not end1) (length string1) end1))
530 (end2 (if (not end2) (length string2) end2))
531 (index (sb!impl::%sp-string-compare
532 string1 start1 end1 string2 start2 end2)))
534 (cond ((= index end1)
535 ,(if ',lessp 'index nil))
536 ((= (+ index (- start2 start1)) end2)
537 ,(if ',lessp nil 'index))
538 ((,(if ',lessp 'char< 'char>)
539 (schar string1 index)
548 ,(if ',equalp 'end1 nil))))))
551 (def string>* nil nil)
552 (def string>=* nil t))
554 (macrolet ((def (name result-fun)
555 `(deftransform ,name ((string1 string2 start1 end1 start2 end2)
556 (simple-base-string simple-base-string t t t t) *)
558 (sb!impl::%sp-string-compare
559 string1 start1 (or end1 (length string1))
560 string2 start2 (or end2 (length string2)))))))
562 (def string/=* identity))
565 ;;;; transforms for sequence functions
567 ;;; Moved here from generic/vm-tran.lisp to satisfy clisp. Only applies
568 ;;; to vectors based on simple arrays.
569 (def!constant vector-data-bit-offset
570 (* sb!vm:vector-data-offset sb!vm:n-word-bits))
572 (eval-when (:compile-toplevel)
573 (defun valid-bit-bash-saetp-p (saetp)
574 ;; BIT-BASHing isn't allowed on simple vectors that contain pointers
575 (and (not (eq t (sb!vm:saetp-specifier saetp)))
576 ;; Disallowing (VECTOR NIL) also means that we won't transform
577 ;; sequence functions into bit-bashing code and we let the
578 ;; generic sequence functions signal errors if necessary.
579 (not (zerop (sb!vm:saetp-n-bits saetp)))
580 ;; Due to limitations with the current BIT-BASHing code, we can't
581 ;; BIT-BASH reliably on arrays whose element types are larger
582 ;; than the word size.
583 (<= (sb!vm:saetp-n-bits saetp) sb!vm:n-word-bits)))
586 ;;; FIXME: In the copy loops below, we code the loops in a strange
589 ;;; (do ((i (+ src-offset length) (1- i)))
591 ;;; (... (aref foo (1- i)) ...))
593 ;;; rather than the more natural (and seemingly more efficient):
595 ;;; (do ((i (1- (+ src-offset length)) (1- i)))
597 ;;; (... (aref foo i) ...))
599 ;;; (more efficient because we don't have to do the index adjusting on
600 ;;; every iteration of the loop)
602 ;;; We do this to avoid a suboptimality in SBCL's backend. In the
603 ;;; latter case, the backend thinks I is a FIXNUM (which it is), but
604 ;;; when used as an array index, the backend thinks I is a
605 ;;; POSITIVE-FIXNUM (which it is). However, since the backend thinks of
606 ;;; these as distinct storage classes, it cannot coerce a move from a
607 ;;; FIXNUM TN to a POSITIVE-FIXNUM TN. The practical effect of this
608 ;;; deficiency is that we have two extra moves and increased register
609 ;;; pressure, which can lead to some spectacularly bad register
610 ;;; allocation. (sub-FIXME: the register allocation even with the
611 ;;; strangely written loops is not always excellent, either...). Doing
612 ;;; it the first way, above, means that I is always thought of as a
613 ;;; POSITIVE-FIXNUM and there are no issues.
615 ;;; Besides, the *-WITH-OFFSET machinery will fold those index
616 ;;; adjustments in the first version into the array addressing at no
617 ;;; performance penalty!
619 ;;; This transform is critical to the performance of string streams. If
620 ;;; you tweak it, make sure that you compare the disassembly, if not the
621 ;;; performance of, the functions implementing string streams
622 ;;; (e.g. SB!IMPL::STRING-OUCH).
623 (eval-when (:compile-toplevel :load-toplevel :execute)
624 (defun make-replace-transform (saetp sequence-type1 sequence-type2)
625 `(deftransform replace ((seq1 seq2 &key (start1 0) (start2 0) end1 end2)
626 (,sequence-type1 ,sequence-type2 &rest t)
630 ((and saetp (valid-bit-bash-saetp-p saetp)) nil)
631 ;; If the sequence types are different, SEQ1 and SEQ2 must
632 ;; be distinct arrays, and we can open code the copy loop.
633 ((not (eql sequence-type1 sequence-type2)) nil)
634 ;; If we're not bit-bashing, only allow cases where we
635 ;; can determine the order of copying up front. (There
636 ;; are actually more cases we can handle if we know the
637 ;; amount that we're copying, but this handles the
639 (t '(unless (= (constant-value-or-lose start1 0)
640 (constant-value-or-lose start2 0))
641 (give-up-ir1-transform))))
642 `(let* ((len1 (length seq1))
644 (end1 (or end1 len1))
645 (end2 (or end2 len2))
646 (replace-len1 (- end1 start1))
647 (replace-len2 (- end2 start2)))
648 ,(unless (policy node (= safety 0))
650 (unless (<= 0 start1 end1 len1)
651 (sequence-bounding-indices-bad-error seq1 start1 end1))
652 (unless (<= 0 start2 end2 len2)
653 (sequence-bounding-indices-bad-error seq2 start2 end2))))
655 ((and saetp (valid-bit-bash-saetp-p saetp))
656 (let* ((n-element-bits (sb!vm:saetp-n-bits saetp))
657 (bash-function (intern (format nil "UB~D-BASH-COPY"
659 (find-package "SB!KERNEL"))))
660 `(funcall (function ,bash-function) seq2 start2
661 seq1 start1 (min replace-len1 replace-len2))))
663 ;; We can expand the loop inline here because we
664 ;; would have given up the transform (see above)
665 ;; if we didn't have constant matching start
667 '(do ((i start1 (1+ i))
670 (min replace-len1 replace-len2))))
672 (declare (optimize (insert-array-bounds-checks 0)))
673 (setf (aref seq1 i) (aref seq2 j)))))
677 ((define-replace-transforms ()
678 (loop for saetp across sb!vm:*specialized-array-element-type-properties*
679 for sequence-type = `(simple-array ,(sb!vm:saetp-specifier saetp) (*))
680 unless (= (sb!vm:saetp-typecode saetp) sb!vm::simple-array-nil-widetag)
681 collect (make-replace-transform saetp sequence-type sequence-type)
683 finally (return `(progn ,@forms))))
684 (define-one-transform (sequence-type1 sequence-type2)
685 (make-replace-transform nil sequence-type1 sequence-type2)))
686 (define-replace-transforms)
689 (define-one-transform (simple-array base-char (*)) (simple-array character (*)))
690 (define-one-transform (simple-array character (*)) (simple-array base-char (*)))))
692 ;;; Expand simple cases of UB<SIZE>-BASH-COPY inline. "simple" is
693 ;;; defined as those cases where we are doing word-aligned copies from
694 ;;; both the source and the destination and we are copying from the same
695 ;;; offset from both the source and the destination. (The last
696 ;;; condition is there so we can determine the direction to copy at
697 ;;; compile time rather than runtime. Remember that UB<SIZE>-BASH-COPY
698 ;;; acts like memmove, not memcpy.) These conditions may seem rather
699 ;;; restrictive, but they do catch common cases, like allocating a (* 2
700 ;;; N)-size buffer and blitting in the old N-size buffer in.
702 (defun frob-bash-transform (src src-offset
704 length n-elems-per-word)
705 (declare (ignore src dst length))
706 (let ((n-bits-per-elem (truncate sb!vm:n-word-bits n-elems-per-word)))
707 (multiple-value-bind (src-word src-elt)
708 (truncate (lvar-value src-offset) n-elems-per-word)
709 (multiple-value-bind (dst-word dst-elt)
710 (truncate (lvar-value dst-offset) n-elems-per-word)
711 ;; Avoid non-word aligned copies.
712 (unless (and (zerop src-elt) (zerop dst-elt))
713 (give-up-ir1-transform))
714 ;; Avoid copies where we would have to insert code for
715 ;; determining the direction of copying.
716 (unless (= src-word dst-word)
717 (give-up-ir1-transform))
718 ;; FIXME: The cross-compiler doesn't optimize TRUNCATE properly,
719 ;; so we have to do its work here.
720 `(let ((end (+ ,src-word ,(if (= n-elems-per-word 1)
722 `(truncate (the index length) ,n-elems-per-word)))))
723 (declare (type index end))
724 ;; Handle any bits at the end.
725 (when (logtest length (1- ,n-elems-per-word))
726 (let* ((extra (mod length ,n-elems-per-word))
727 ;; FIXME: The shift amount on this ASH is
728 ;; *always* negative, but the backend doesn't
729 ;; have a NEGATIVE-FIXNUM primitive type, so we
730 ;; wind up with a pile of code that tests the
731 ;; sign of the shift count prior to shifting when
732 ;; all we need is a simple negate and shift
734 (mask (ash #.(1- (ash 1 sb!vm:n-word-bits))
735 (* (- extra ,n-elems-per-word)
737 (setf (sb!kernel:%vector-raw-bits dst end)
739 (logandc2 (sb!kernel:%vector-raw-bits dst end)
741 ,(ecase sb!c:*backend-byte-order*
743 (:big-endian `(* (- ,n-elems-per-word extra)
744 ,n-bits-per-elem)))))
745 (logand (sb!kernel:%vector-raw-bits src end)
747 ,(ecase sb!c:*backend-byte-order*
749 (:big-endian `(* (- ,n-elems-per-word extra)
750 ,n-bits-per-elem)))))))))
751 ;; Copy from the end to save a register.
754 (setf (sb!kernel:%vector-raw-bits dst (1- i))
755 (sb!kernel:%vector-raw-bits src (1- i))))
758 #.(loop for i = 1 then (* i 2)
759 collect `(deftransform ,(intern (format nil "UB~D-BASH-COPY" i)
764 ((simple-unboxed-array (*))
766 (simple-unboxed-array (*))
770 (frob-bash-transform src src-offset
771 dst dst-offset length
772 ,(truncate sb!vm:n-word-bits i))) into forms
773 until (= i sb!vm:n-word-bits)
774 finally (return `(progn ,@forms)))
776 ;;; We expand copy loops inline in SUBSEQ and COPY-SEQ if we're copying
777 ;;; arrays with elements of size >= the word size. We do this because
778 ;;; we know the arrays cannot alias (one was just consed), therefore we
779 ;;; can determine at compile time the direction to copy, and for
780 ;;; word-sized elements, UB<WORD-SIZE>-BASH-COPY will do a bit of
781 ;;; needless checking to figure out what's going on. The same
782 ;;; considerations apply if we are copying elements larger than the word
783 ;;; size, with the additional twist that doing it inline is likely to
784 ;;; cons far less than calling REPLACE and letting generic code do the
787 ;;; However, we do not do this for elements whose size is < than the
788 ;;; word size because we don't want to deal with any alignment issues
789 ;;; inline. The UB*-BASH-COPY transforms might fix things up later
792 (defun maybe-expand-copy-loop-inline (src src-offset dst dst-offset length
794 (let ((saetp (find-saetp element-type)))
796 (if (>= (sb!vm:saetp-n-bits saetp) sb!vm:n-word-bits)
797 (expand-aref-copy-loop src src-offset dst dst-offset length)
798 `(locally (declare (optimize (safety 0)))
799 (replace ,dst ,src :start1 ,dst-offset :start2 ,src-offset :end1 ,length)))))
801 (defun expand-aref-copy-loop (src src-offset dst dst-offset length)
802 (if (eql src-offset dst-offset)
803 `(do ((i (+ ,src-offset ,length) (1- i)))
805 (declare (optimize (insert-array-bounds-checks 0)))
806 (setf (aref ,dst (1- i)) (aref ,src (1- i))))
807 ;; KLUDGE: The compiler is not able to derive that (+ offset
808 ;; length) must be a fixnum, but arrives at (unsigned-byte 29).
809 ;; We, however, know it must be so, as by this point the bounds
810 ;; have already been checked.
811 `(do ((i (truly-the fixnum (+ ,src-offset ,length)) (1- i))
812 (j (+ ,dst-offset ,length) (1- j)))
814 (declare (optimize (insert-array-bounds-checks 0))
815 (type (integer 0 #.sb!xc:array-dimension-limit) j i))
816 (setf (aref ,dst (1- j)) (aref ,src (1- i))))))
820 (deftransform subseq ((seq start &optional end)
821 (vector t &optional t)
824 (let ((type (lvar-type seq)))
826 ((and (array-type-p type)
827 (csubtypep type (specifier-type '(or (simple-unboxed-array (*)) simple-vector))))
828 (let ((element-type (type-specifier (array-type-specialized-element-type type))))
829 `(let* ((length (length seq))
830 (end (or end length)))
831 ,(unless (policy node (zerop insert-array-bounds-checks))
833 (unless (<= 0 start end length)
834 (sequence-bounding-indices-bad-error seq start end))))
835 (let* ((size (- end start))
836 (result (make-array size :element-type ',element-type)))
837 ,(maybe-expand-copy-loop-inline 'seq (if (constant-lvar-p start)
840 'result 0 'size element-type)
842 ((csubtypep type (specifier-type 'string))
843 '(string-subseq* seq start end))
845 '(vector-subseq* seq start end)))))
847 (deftransform subseq ((seq start &optional end)
848 (list t &optional t))
849 `(list-subseq* seq start end))
851 (deftransform subseq ((seq start &optional end)
852 ((and sequence (not vector) (not list)) t &optional t))
853 '(sb!sequence:subseq seq start end))
855 (deftransform copy-seq ((seq) (vector))
856 (let ((type (lvar-type seq)))
857 (cond ((and (array-type-p type)
858 (csubtypep type (specifier-type '(or (simple-unboxed-array (*)) simple-vector))))
859 (let ((element-type (type-specifier (array-type-specialized-element-type type))))
860 `(let* ((length (length seq))
861 (result (make-array length :element-type ',element-type)))
862 ,(maybe-expand-copy-loop-inline 'seq 0 'result 0 'length element-type)
864 ((csubtypep type (specifier-type 'string))
865 '(string-subseq* seq 0 nil))
867 '(vector-subseq* seq 0 nil)))))
869 (deftransform copy-seq ((seq) (list))
870 '(list-copy-seq* seq))
872 (deftransform copy-seq ((seq) ((and sequence (not vector) (not list))))
873 '(sb!sequence:copy-seq seq))
875 ;;; FIXME: it really should be possible to take advantage of the
876 ;;; macros used in code/seq.lisp here to avoid duplication of code,
877 ;;; and enable even funkier transformations.
878 (deftransform search ((pattern text &key (start1 0) (start2 0) end1 end2
882 (vector vector &rest t)
885 :policy (> speed (max space safety)))
887 (let ((from-end (when (lvar-p from-end)
888 (unless (constant-lvar-p from-end)
889 (give-up-ir1-transform ":FROM-END is not constant."))
890 (lvar-value from-end)))
892 (testp (lvar-p test))
893 (check-bounds-p (policy node (plusp insert-array-bounds-checks))))
895 (flet ((oops (vector start end)
896 (sequence-bounding-indices-bad-error vector start end)))
897 (let* ((len1 (length pattern))
899 (end1 (or end1 len1))
900 (end2 (or end2 len2))
902 '((key (coerce key 'function))))
904 '((test (coerce test 'function)))))
905 (declare (type index start1 start2 end1 end2))
906 ,@(when check-bounds-p
907 `((unless (<= start1 end1 len1)
908 (oops pattern start1 end1))
909 (unless (<= start2 end2 len2)
910 (oops pattern start2 end2))))
912 '(index2 (- end2 (- end1 start1)) (1- index2))
913 '(index2 start2 (1+ index2))))
918 ;; INDEX2 is FIXNUM, not an INDEX, as right before the loop
919 ;; terminates is hits -1 when :FROM-END is true and :START2
921 (declare (type fixnum index2))
922 (when (do ((index1 start1 (1+ index1))
923 (index2 index2 (1+ index2)))
925 (declare (type index index1 index2)
926 (optimize (insert-array-bounds-checks 0)))
928 '((when (= index2 end2)
929 (return-from search nil))))
934 '(funcall key (aref pattern index1))
935 '(aref pattern index1))
937 '(funcall key (aref text index2))
938 '(aref text index2)))
940 (return index2))))))))
943 ;;; Open-code CONCATENATE for strings. It would be possible to extend
944 ;;; this transform to non-strings, but I chose to just do the case that
945 ;;; should cover 95% of CONCATENATE performance complaints for now.
946 ;;; -- JES, 2007-11-17
947 (deftransform concatenate ((result-type &rest lvars)
948 (symbol &rest sequence)
950 :policy (> speed space))
951 (unless (constant-lvar-p result-type)
952 (give-up-ir1-transform))
953 (let* ((element-type (let ((type (lvar-value result-type)))
954 ;; Only handle the simple result type cases. If
955 ;; somebody does (CONCATENATE '(STRING 6) ...)
956 ;; their code won't be optimized, but nobody does
959 ((string simple-string) 'character)
960 ((base-string simple-base-string) 'base-char)
961 (t (give-up-ir1-transform)))))
962 (vars (loop for x in lvars collect (gensym)))
963 (lvar-values (loop for lvar in lvars
964 collect (when (constant-lvar-p lvar)
967 (loop for value in lvar-values
971 `(sb!impl::string-dispatch ((simple-array * (*))
974 (declare (muffle-conditions compiler-note))
978 (declare (ignorable ,@vars))
979 (let* ((.length. (+ ,@lengths))
981 (.string. (make-string .length. :element-type ',element-type)))
982 (declare (type index .length. .pos.)
983 (muffle-conditions compiler-note))
984 ,@(loop for value in lvar-values
986 collect (if (stringp value)
987 ;; Fold the array reads for constant arguments
989 ,@(loop for c across value
990 collect `(setf (aref .string.
992 collect `(incf .pos.)))
993 `(sb!impl::string-dispatch
995 (simple-array character (*))
996 (simple-array base-char (*))
999 (replace .string. ,var :start1 .pos.)
1000 (incf .pos. (length ,var)))))
1004 ;;;; CONS accessor DERIVE-TYPE optimizers
1006 (defoptimizer (car derive-type) ((cons))
1007 (let ((type (lvar-type cons))
1008 (null-type (specifier-type 'null)))
1009 (cond ((eq type null-type)
1012 (cons-type-car-type type)))))
1014 (defoptimizer (cdr derive-type) ((cons))
1015 (let ((type (lvar-type cons))
1016 (null-type (specifier-type 'null)))
1017 (cond ((eq type null-type)
1020 (cons-type-cdr-type type)))))
1022 ;;;; FIND, POSITION, and their -IF and -IF-NOT variants
1024 ;;; We want to make sure that %FIND-POSITION is inline-expanded into
1025 ;;; %FIND-POSITION-IF only when %FIND-POSITION-IF has an inline
1026 ;;; expansion, so we factor out the condition into this function.
1027 (defun check-inlineability-of-find-position-if (sequence from-end)
1028 (let ((ctype (lvar-type sequence)))
1029 (cond ((csubtypep ctype (specifier-type 'vector))
1030 ;; It's not worth trying to inline vector code unless we
1031 ;; know a fair amount about it at compile time.
1032 (upgraded-element-type-specifier-or-give-up sequence)
1033 (unless (constant-lvar-p from-end)
1034 (give-up-ir1-transform
1035 "FROM-END argument value not known at compile time")))
1036 ((csubtypep ctype (specifier-type 'list))
1037 ;; Inlining on lists is generally worthwhile.
1040 (give-up-ir1-transform
1041 "sequence type not known at compile time")))))
1043 ;;; %FIND-POSITION-IF and %FIND-POSITION-IF-NOT for LIST data
1044 (macrolet ((def (name condition)
1045 `(deftransform ,name ((predicate sequence from-end start end key)
1046 (function list t t t function)
1048 :policy (> speed space))
1053 (declare (type index index))
1055 (if (and end (> end index))
1056 (sequence-bounding-indices-bad-error
1058 (values find position)))
1059 (let ((key-i (funcall key i)))
1060 (when (and end (>= index end))
1061 (return (values find position)))
1062 (when (>= index start)
1063 (,',condition (funcall predicate key-i)
1064 ;; This hack of dealing with non-NIL
1065 ;; FROM-END for list data by iterating
1066 ;; forward through the list and keeping
1067 ;; track of the last time we found a match
1068 ;; might be more screwy than what the user
1069 ;; expects, but it seems to be allowed by
1070 ;; the ANSI standard. (And if the user is
1071 ;; screwy enough to ask for FROM-END
1072 ;; behavior on list data, turnabout is
1075 ;; It's also not enormously efficient,
1076 ;; calling PREDICATE and KEY more often
1077 ;; than necessary; but all the
1078 ;; alternatives seem to have their own
1079 ;; efficiency problems.
1083 (return (values i index))))))
1085 (def %find-position-if when)
1086 (def %find-position-if-not unless))
1088 ;;; %FIND-POSITION for LIST data can be expanded into %FIND-POSITION-IF
1089 ;;; without loss of efficiency. (I.e., the optimizer should be able
1090 ;;; to straighten everything out.)
1091 (deftransform %find-position ((item sequence from-end start end key test)
1094 :policy (> speed space))
1096 '(%find-position-if (let ((test-fun (%coerce-callable-to-fun test)))
1097 ;; The order of arguments for asymmetric tests
1098 ;; (e.g. #'<, as opposed to order-independent
1099 ;; tests like #'=) is specified in the spec
1100 ;; section 17.2.1 -- the O/Zi stuff there.
1102 (funcall test-fun item i)))
1107 (%coerce-callable-to-fun key)))
1109 ;;; The inline expansions for the VECTOR case are saved as macros so
1110 ;;; that we can share them between the DEFTRANSFORMs and the default
1111 ;;; cases in the DEFUNs. (This isn't needed for the LIST case, because
1112 ;;; the DEFTRANSFORMs for LIST are less choosy about when to expand.)
1113 (defun %find-position-or-find-position-if-vector-expansion (sequence-arg
1119 (with-unique-names (offset block index n-sequence sequence end)
1120 `(let* ((,n-sequence ,sequence-arg))
1121 (with-array-data ((,sequence ,n-sequence :offset-var ,offset)
1124 :check-fill-pointer t)
1126 (macrolet ((maybe-return ()
1127 ;; WITH-ARRAY-DATA has already performed bounds
1128 ;; checking, so we can safely elide the checks
1129 ;; in the inner loop.
1130 '(let ((,element (locally (declare (optimize (insert-array-bounds-checks 0)))
1131 (aref ,sequence ,index))))
1135 (- ,index ,offset)))))))
1138 ;; (If we aren't fastidious about declaring that
1139 ;; INDEX might be -1, then (FIND 1 #() :FROM-END T)
1140 ;; can send us off into never-never land, since
1141 ;; INDEX is initialized to -1.)
1142 of-type index-or-minus-1
1143 from (1- ,end) downto ,start do
1145 (loop for ,index of-type index from ,start below ,end do
1147 (values nil nil))))))
1149 (def!macro %find-position-vector-macro (item sequence
1150 from-end start end key test)
1151 (with-unique-names (element)
1152 (%find-position-or-find-position-if-vector-expansion
1158 ;; (See the LIST transform for a discussion of the correct
1159 ;; argument order, i.e. whether the searched-for ,ITEM goes before
1160 ;; or after the checked sequence element.)
1161 `(funcall ,test ,item (funcall ,key ,element)))))
1163 (def!macro %find-position-if-vector-macro (predicate sequence
1164 from-end start end key)
1165 (with-unique-names (element)
1166 (%find-position-or-find-position-if-vector-expansion
1172 `(funcall ,predicate (funcall ,key ,element)))))
1174 (def!macro %find-position-if-not-vector-macro (predicate sequence
1175 from-end start end key)
1176 (with-unique-names (element)
1177 (%find-position-or-find-position-if-vector-expansion
1183 `(not (funcall ,predicate (funcall ,key ,element))))))
1185 ;;; %FIND-POSITION, %FIND-POSITION-IF and %FIND-POSITION-IF-NOT for
1187 (deftransform %find-position-if ((predicate sequence from-end start end key)
1188 (function vector t t t function)
1190 :policy (> speed space))
1192 (check-inlineability-of-find-position-if sequence from-end)
1193 '(%find-position-if-vector-macro predicate sequence
1194 from-end start end key))
1196 (deftransform %find-position-if-not ((predicate sequence from-end start end key)
1197 (function vector t t t function)
1199 :policy (> speed space))
1201 (check-inlineability-of-find-position-if sequence from-end)
1202 '(%find-position-if-not-vector-macro predicate sequence
1203 from-end start end key))
1205 (deftransform %find-position ((item sequence from-end start end key test)
1206 (t vector t t t function function)
1208 :policy (> speed space))
1210 (check-inlineability-of-find-position-if sequence from-end)
1211 '(%find-position-vector-macro item sequence
1212 from-end start end key test))
1214 ;;; logic to unravel :TEST, :TEST-NOT, and :KEY options in FIND,
1215 ;;; POSITION-IF, etc.
1216 (define-source-transform effective-find-position-test (test test-not)
1217 (once-only ((test test)
1218 (test-not test-not))
1220 ((and ,test ,test-not)
1221 (error "can't specify both :TEST and :TEST-NOT"))
1222 (,test (%coerce-callable-to-fun ,test))
1224 ;; (Without DYNAMIC-EXTENT, this is potentially horribly
1225 ;; inefficient, but since the TEST-NOT option is deprecated
1226 ;; anyway, we don't care.)
1227 (complement (%coerce-callable-to-fun ,test-not)))
1229 (define-source-transform effective-find-position-key (key)
1230 (once-only ((key key))
1232 (%coerce-callable-to-fun ,key)
1235 (macrolet ((define-find-position (fun-name values-index)
1236 `(deftransform ,fun-name ((item sequence &key
1237 from-end (start 0) end
1239 (t (or list vector) &rest t))
1240 '(nth-value ,values-index
1241 (%find-position item sequence
1244 (effective-find-position-key key)
1245 (effective-find-position-test
1247 (define-find-position find 0)
1248 (define-find-position position 1))
1250 (macrolet ((define-find-position-if (fun-name values-index)
1251 `(deftransform ,fun-name ((predicate sequence &key
1254 (t (or list vector) &rest t))
1257 (%find-position-if (%coerce-callable-to-fun predicate)
1260 (effective-find-position-key key))))))
1261 (define-find-position-if find-if 0)
1262 (define-find-position-if position-if 1))
1264 ;;; the deprecated functions FIND-IF-NOT and POSITION-IF-NOT. We
1265 ;;; didn't bother to worry about optimizing them, except note that on
1266 ;;; Sat, Oct 06, 2001 at 04:22:38PM +0100, Christophe Rhodes wrote on
1269 ;;; My understanding is that while the :test-not argument is
1270 ;;; deprecated in favour of :test (complement #'foo) because of
1271 ;;; semantic difficulties (what happens if both :test and :test-not
1272 ;;; are supplied, etc) the -if-not variants, while officially
1273 ;;; deprecated, would be undeprecated were X3J13 actually to produce
1274 ;;; a revised standard, as there are perfectly legitimate idiomatic
1275 ;;; reasons for allowing the -if-not versions equal status,
1276 ;;; particularly remove-if-not (== filter).
1278 ;;; This is only an informal understanding, I grant you, but
1279 ;;; perhaps it's worth optimizing the -if-not versions in the same
1280 ;;; way as the others?
1282 ;;; FIXME: Maybe remove uses of these deprecated functions within the
1283 ;;; implementation of SBCL.
1284 (macrolet ((define-find-position-if-not (fun-name values-index)
1285 `(deftransform ,fun-name ((predicate sequence &key
1288 (t (or list vector) &rest t))
1291 (%find-position-if-not (%coerce-callable-to-fun predicate)
1294 (effective-find-position-key key))))))
1295 (define-find-position-if-not find-if-not 0)
1296 (define-find-position-if-not position-if-not 1))
1298 (macrolet ((define-trimmer-transform (fun-name leftp rightp)
1299 `(deftransform ,fun-name ((char-bag string)
1302 (if (constant-lvar-p char-bag)
1303 ;; If the bag is constant, use MEMBER
1304 ;; instead of FIND, since we have a
1305 ;; deftransform for MEMBER that can
1306 ;; open-code all of the comparisons when
1307 ;; the list is constant. -- JES, 2007-12-10
1308 `(not (member (schar string index)
1309 ',(coerce (lvar-value char-bag) 'list)
1311 '(not (find (schar string index) char-bag :test #'char=)))))
1312 `(flet ((char-not-in-bag (index)
1314 (let* ((end (length string))
1315 (left-end (if ,',leftp
1316 (do ((index 0 (1+ index)))
1317 ((or (= index (the fixnum end))
1318 (char-not-in-bag index))
1320 (declare (fixnum index)))
1322 (right-end (if ,',rightp
1323 (do ((index (1- end) (1- index)))
1324 ((or (< index left-end)
1325 (char-not-in-bag index))
1327 (declare (fixnum index)))
1329 (if (and (eql left-end 0)
1330 (eql right-end (length string)))
1332 (subseq string left-end right-end))))))))
1333 (define-trimmer-transform string-left-trim t nil)
1334 (define-trimmer-transform string-right-trim nil t)
1335 (define-trimmer-transform string-trim t t))