;;;; This file contains miscellaneous utilities used for manipulating ;;;; the IR1 representation. ;;;; This software is part of the SBCL system. See the README file for ;;;; more information. ;;;; ;;;; This software is derived from the CMU CL system, which was ;;;; written at Carnegie Mellon University and released into the ;;;; public domain. The software is in the public domain and is ;;;; provided with absolutely no warranty. See the COPYING and CREDITS ;;;; files for more information. (in-package "SB!C") ;;;; cleanup hackery ;;; Return the innermost cleanup enclosing NODE, or NIL if there is ;;; none in its function. If NODE has no cleanup, but is in a LET, ;;; then we must still check the environment that the call is in. (defun node-enclosing-cleanup (node) (declare (type node node)) (do ((lexenv (node-lexenv node) (lambda-call-lexenv (lexenv-lambda lexenv)))) ((null lexenv) nil) (let ((cup (lexenv-cleanup lexenv))) (when cup (return cup))))) ;;; Convert the FORM in a block inserted between BLOCK1 and BLOCK2 as ;;; an implicit MV-PROG1. The inserted block is returned. NODE is used ;;; for IR1 context when converting the form. Note that the block is ;;; not assigned a number, and is linked into the DFO at the ;;; beginning. We indicate that we have trashed the DFO by setting ;;; COMPONENT-REANALYZE. If CLEANUP is supplied, then convert with ;;; that cleanup. (defun insert-cleanup-code (block1 block2 node form &optional cleanup) (declare (type cblock block1 block2) (type node node) (type (or cleanup null) cleanup)) (setf (component-reanalyze (block-component block1)) t) (with-ir1-environment-from-node node (with-component-last-block (*current-component* (block-next (component-head *current-component*))) (let* ((start (make-ctran)) (block (ctran-starts-block start)) (next (make-ctran)) (*lexenv* (if cleanup (make-lexenv :cleanup cleanup) *lexenv*))) (change-block-successor block1 block2 block) (link-blocks block block2) (ir1-convert start next nil form) (setf (block-last block) (ctran-use next)) (setf (node-next (block-last block)) nil) block)))) ;;;; lvar use hacking ;;; Return a list of all the nodes which use LVAR. (declaim (ftype (sfunction (lvar) list) find-uses)) (defun find-uses (lvar) (let ((uses (lvar-uses lvar))) (if (listp uses) uses (list uses)))) (declaim (ftype (sfunction (lvar) lvar) principal-lvar)) (defun principal-lvar (lvar) (labels ((pl (lvar) (let ((use (lvar-uses lvar))) (if (cast-p use) (pl (cast-value use)) lvar)))) (pl lvar))) (defun principal-lvar-use (lvar) (labels ((plu (lvar) (declare (type lvar lvar)) (let ((use (lvar-uses lvar))) (if (cast-p use) (plu (cast-value use)) use)))) (plu lvar))) ;;; Update lvar use information so that NODE is no longer a use of its ;;; LVAR. ;;; ;;; Note: if you call this function, you may have to do a ;;; REOPTIMIZE-LVAR to inform IR1 optimization that something has ;;; changed. (declaim (ftype (sfunction (node) (values)) delete-lvar-use %delete-lvar-use)) ;;; Just delete NODE from its LVAR uses; LVAR is preserved so it may ;;; be given a new use. (defun %delete-lvar-use (node) (let ((lvar (node-lvar node))) (when lvar (if (listp (lvar-uses lvar)) (let ((new-uses (delq node (lvar-uses lvar)))) (setf (lvar-uses lvar) (if (singleton-p new-uses) (first new-uses) new-uses))) (setf (lvar-uses lvar) nil)) (setf (node-lvar node) nil))) (values)) ;;; Delete NODE from its LVAR uses; if LVAR has no other uses, delete ;;; its DEST's block, which must be unreachable. (defun delete-lvar-use (node) (let ((lvar (node-lvar node))) (when lvar (%delete-lvar-use node) (if (null (lvar-uses lvar)) (binding* ((dest (lvar-dest lvar) :exit-if-null) (() (not (node-deleted dest)) :exit-if-null) (block (node-block dest))) (mark-for-deletion block)) (reoptimize-lvar lvar)))) (values)) ;;; Update lvar use information so that NODE uses LVAR. ;;; ;;; Note: if you call this function, you may have to do a ;;; REOPTIMIZE-LVAR to inform IR1 optimization that something has ;;; changed. (declaim (ftype (sfunction (node (or lvar null)) (values)) add-lvar-use)) (defun add-lvar-use (node lvar) (aver (not (node-lvar node))) (when lvar (let ((uses (lvar-uses lvar))) (setf (lvar-uses lvar) (cond ((null uses) node) ((listp uses) (cons node uses)) (t (list node uses)))) (setf (node-lvar node) lvar))) (values)) ;;; Return true if LVAR destination is executed immediately after ;;; NODE. Cleanups are ignored. (defun immediately-used-p (lvar node) (declare (type lvar lvar) (type node node)) (aver (eq (node-lvar node) lvar)) (let ((dest (lvar-dest lvar))) (acond ((node-next node) (eq (ctran-next it) dest)) (t (eq (block-start (first (block-succ (node-block node)))) (node-prev dest)))))) ;;; Return true if LVAR destination is executed after node with only ;;; uninteresting nodes intervening. ;;; ;;; Uninteresting nodes are nodes in the same block which are either ;;; REFs, external CASTs to the same destination, or known combinations ;;; that never unwind. (defun almost-immediately-used-p (lvar node) (declare (type lvar lvar) (type node node)) (aver (eq (node-lvar node) lvar)) (let ((dest (lvar-dest lvar))) (tagbody :next (let ((ctran (node-next node))) (cond (ctran (setf node (ctran-next ctran)) (if (eq node dest) (return-from almost-immediately-used-p t) (typecase node (ref (go :next)) (cast (when (and (eq :external (cast-type-check node)) (eq dest (node-dest node))) (go :next))) (combination ;; KLUDGE: Unfortunately we don't have an attribute for ;; "never unwinds", so we just special case ;; %ALLOCATE-CLOSURES: it is easy to run into with eg. ;; FORMAT and a non-constant first argument. (when (eq '%allocate-closures (combination-fun-source-name node nil)) (go :next)))))) (t (when (eq (block-start (first (block-succ (node-block node)))) (node-prev dest)) (return-from almost-immediately-used-p t)))))))) ;;;; lvar substitution ;;; In OLD's DEST, replace OLD with NEW. NEW's DEST must initially be ;;; NIL. We do not flush OLD's DEST. (defun substitute-lvar (new old) (declare (type lvar old new)) (aver (not (lvar-dest new))) (let ((dest (lvar-dest old))) (etypecase dest ((or ref bind)) (cif (setf (if-test dest) new)) (cset (setf (set-value dest) new)) (creturn (setf (return-result dest) new)) (exit (setf (exit-value dest) new)) (basic-combination (if (eq old (basic-combination-fun dest)) (setf (basic-combination-fun dest) new) (setf (basic-combination-args dest) (nsubst new old (basic-combination-args dest))))) (cast (setf (cast-value dest) new))) (setf (lvar-dest old) nil) (setf (lvar-dest new) dest) (flush-lvar-externally-checkable-type new)) (values)) ;;; Replace all uses of OLD with uses of NEW, where NEW has an ;;; arbitary number of uses. NEW is supposed to be "later" than OLD. (defun substitute-lvar-uses (new old propagate-dx) (declare (type lvar old) (type (or lvar null) new) (type boolean propagate-dx)) (cond (new (do-uses (node old) (%delete-lvar-use node) (add-lvar-use node new)) (reoptimize-lvar new) (awhen (and propagate-dx (lvar-dynamic-extent old)) (setf (lvar-dynamic-extent old) nil) (unless (lvar-dynamic-extent new) (setf (lvar-dynamic-extent new) it) (setf (cleanup-info it) (subst new old (cleanup-info it))))) (when (lvar-dynamic-extent new) (do-uses (node new) (node-ends-block node)))) (t (flush-dest old))) (values)) ;;;; block starting/creation ;;; Return the block that CTRAN is the start of, making a block if ;;; necessary. This function is called by IR1 translators which may ;;; cause a CTRAN to be used more than once. Every CTRAN which may be ;;; used more than once must start a block by the time that anyone ;;; does a USE-CTRAN on it. ;;; ;;; We also throw the block into the next/prev list for the ;;; *CURRENT-COMPONENT* so that we keep track of which blocks we have ;;; made. (defun ctran-starts-block (ctran) (declare (type ctran ctran)) (ecase (ctran-kind ctran) (:unused (aver (not (ctran-block ctran))) (let* ((next (component-last-block *current-component*)) (prev (block-prev next)) (new-block (make-block ctran))) (setf (block-next new-block) next (block-prev new-block) prev (block-prev next) new-block (block-next prev) new-block (ctran-block ctran) new-block (ctran-kind ctran) :block-start) (aver (not (ctran-use ctran))) new-block)) (:block-start (ctran-block ctran)))) ;;; Ensure that CTRAN is the start of a block so that the use set can ;;; be freely manipulated. (defun ensure-block-start (ctran) (declare (type ctran ctran)) (let ((kind (ctran-kind ctran))) (ecase kind ((:block-start)) ((:unused) (setf (ctran-block ctran) (make-block-key :start ctran)) (setf (ctran-kind ctran) :block-start)) ((:inside-block) (node-ends-block (ctran-use ctran))))) (values)) ;;; CTRAN must be the last ctran in an incomplete block; finish the ;;; block and start a new one if necessary. (defun start-block (ctran) (declare (type ctran ctran)) (aver (not (ctran-next ctran))) (ecase (ctran-kind ctran) (:inside-block (let ((block (ctran-block ctran)) (node (ctran-use ctran))) (aver (not (block-last block))) (aver node) (setf (block-last block) node) (setf (node-next node) nil) (setf (ctran-use ctran) nil) (setf (ctran-kind ctran) :unused) (setf (ctran-block ctran) nil) (link-blocks block (ctran-starts-block ctran)))) (:block-start))) ;;;; ;;; Filter values of LVAR through FORM, which must be an ordinary/mv ;;; call. First argument must be 'DUMMY, which will be replaced with ;;; LVAR. In case of an ordinary call the function should not have ;;; return type NIL. We create a new "filtered" lvar. ;;; ;;; TODO: remove preconditions. (defun filter-lvar (lvar form) (declare (type lvar lvar) (type list form)) (let* ((dest (lvar-dest lvar)) (ctran (node-prev dest))) (with-ir1-environment-from-node dest (ensure-block-start ctran) (let* ((old-block (ctran-block ctran)) (new-start (make-ctran)) (filtered-lvar (make-lvar)) (new-block (ctran-starts-block new-start))) ;; Splice in the new block before DEST, giving the new block ;; all of DEST's predecessors. (dolist (block (block-pred old-block)) (change-block-successor block old-block new-block)) (ir1-convert new-start ctran filtered-lvar form) ;; KLUDGE: Comments at the head of this function in CMU CL ;; said that somewhere in here we ;; Set the new block's start and end cleanups to the *start* ;; cleanup of PREV's block. This overrides the incorrect ;; default from WITH-IR1-ENVIRONMENT-FROM-NODE. ;; Unfortunately I can't find any code which corresponds to this. ;; Perhaps it was a stale comment? Or perhaps I just don't ;; understand.. -- WHN 19990521 ;; Replace 'DUMMY with the LVAR. (We can find 'DUMMY because ;; no LET conversion has been done yet.) The [mv-]combination ;; code from the call in the form will be the use of the new ;; check lvar. We substitute for the first argument of ;; this node. (let* ((node (lvar-use filtered-lvar)) (args (basic-combination-args node)) (victim (first args))) (aver (eq (constant-value (ref-leaf (lvar-use victim))) 'dummy)) (substitute-lvar filtered-lvar lvar) (substitute-lvar lvar victim) (flush-dest victim)) ;; Invoking local call analysis converts this call to a LET. (locall-analyze-component *current-component*)))) (values)) ;;; Delete NODE and VALUE. It may result in some calls becoming tail. (defun delete-filter (node lvar value) (aver (eq (lvar-dest value) node)) (aver (eq (node-lvar node) lvar)) (cond (lvar (collect ((merges)) (when (return-p (lvar-dest lvar)) (do-uses (use value) (when (and (basic-combination-p use) (eq (basic-combination-kind use) :local)) (merges use)))) (substitute-lvar-uses lvar value (and lvar (eq (lvar-uses lvar) node))) (%delete-lvar-use node) (prog1 (unlink-node node) (dolist (merge (merges)) (merge-tail-sets merge))))) (t (flush-dest value) (unlink-node node)))) ;;; Make a CAST and insert it into IR1 before node NEXT. (defun insert-cast-before (next lvar type policy) (declare (type node next) (type lvar lvar) (type ctype type)) (with-ir1-environment-from-node next (let* ((ctran (node-prev next)) (cast (make-cast lvar type policy)) (internal-ctran (make-ctran))) (setf (ctran-next ctran) cast (node-prev cast) ctran) (use-ctran cast internal-ctran) (link-node-to-previous-ctran next internal-ctran) (setf (lvar-dest lvar) cast) (reoptimize-lvar lvar) (when (return-p next) (node-ends-block cast)) (setf (block-attributep (block-flags (node-block cast)) type-check type-asserted) t) cast))) ;;;; miscellaneous shorthand functions ;;; Return the home (i.e. enclosing non-LET) CLAMBDA for NODE. Since ;;; the LEXENV-LAMBDA may be deleted, we must chain up the ;;; LAMBDA-CALL-LEXENV thread until we find a CLAMBDA that isn't ;;; deleted, and then return its home. (defun node-home-lambda (node) (declare (type node node)) (do ((fun (lexenv-lambda (node-lexenv node)) (lexenv-lambda (lambda-call-lexenv fun)))) ((not (memq (functional-kind fun) '(:deleted :zombie))) (lambda-home fun)) (when (eq (lambda-home fun) fun) (return fun)))) #!-sb-fluid (declaim (inline node-block)) (defun node-block (node) (ctran-block (node-prev node))) (declaim (ftype (sfunction (node) component) node-component)) (defun node-component (node) (block-component (node-block node))) (declaim (ftype (sfunction (node) physenv) node-physenv)) (defun node-physenv (node) (lambda-physenv (node-home-lambda node))) #!-sb-fluid (declaim (inline node-dest)) (defun node-dest (node) (awhen (node-lvar node) (lvar-dest it))) #!-sb-fluid (declaim (inline node-stack-allocate-p)) (defun node-stack-allocate-p (node) (awhen (node-lvar node) (lvar-dynamic-extent it))) (defun flushable-combination-p (call) (declare (combination call)) (let ((kind (combination-kind call)) (info (combination-fun-info call))) (when (and (eq kind :known) (fun-info-p info)) (let ((attr (fun-info-attributes info))) (when (and (not (ir1-attributep attr call)) ;; FIXME: For now, don't consider potentially flushable ;; calls flushable when they have the CALL attribute. ;; Someday we should look at the functional args to ;; determine if they have any side effects. (if (policy call (= safety 3)) (ir1-attributep attr flushable) (ir1-attributep attr unsafely-flushable))) t))))) ;;;; DYNAMIC-EXTENT related (defun note-no-stack-allocation (lvar &key flush) (do-uses (use (principal-lvar lvar)) (unless (or ;; Don't complain about not being able to stack allocate constants. (and (ref-p use) (constant-p (ref-leaf use))) ;; If we're flushing, don't complain if we can flush the combination. (and flush (combination-p use) (flushable-combination-p use))) (let ((*compiler-error-context* use)) (compiler-notify "could not stack allocate the result of ~S" (find-original-source (node-source-path use))))))) (declaim (ftype (sfunction (node (member nil t :truly) &optional (or null component)) boolean) use-good-for-dx-p)) (declaim (ftype (sfunction (lvar (member nil t :truly) &optional (or null component)) boolean) lvar-good-for-dx-p)) (defun use-good-for-dx-p (use dx &optional component) ;; FIXME: Can casts point to LVARs in other components? ;; RECHECK-DYNAMIC-EXTENT-LVARS assumes that they can't -- that is, that the ;; PRINCIPAL-LVAR is always in the same component as the original one. It ;; would be either good to have an explanation of why casts don't point ;; across components, or an explanation of when they do it. ...in the ;; meanwhile AVER that our assumption holds true. (aver (or (not component) (eq component (node-component use)))) (or (dx-combination-p use dx) (and (cast-p use) (not (cast-type-check use)) (lvar-good-for-dx-p (cast-value use) dx component)) (and (trivial-lambda-var-ref-p use) (let ((uses (lvar-uses (trivial-lambda-var-ref-lvar use)))) (or (eq use uses) (lvar-good-for-dx-p (trivial-lambda-var-ref-lvar use) dx component)))))) (defun lvar-good-for-dx-p (lvar dx &optional component) (let ((uses (lvar-uses lvar))) (if (listp uses) (when uses (every (lambda (use) (use-good-for-dx-p use dx component)) uses)) (use-good-for-dx-p uses dx component)))) (defun known-dx-combination-p (use dx) (and (eq (combination-kind use) :known) (let ((info (combination-fun-info use))) (or (awhen (fun-info-stack-allocate-result info) (funcall it use dx)) (awhen (fun-info-result-arg info) (let ((args (combination-args use))) (lvar-good-for-dx-p (if (zerop it) (car args) (nth it args)) dx))))))) (defun dx-combination-p (use dx) (and (combination-p use) (or ;; Known, and can do DX. (known-dx-combination-p use dx) ;; Possibly a not-yet-eliminated lambda which ends up returning the ;; results of an actual known DX combination. (let* ((fun (combination-fun use)) (ref (principal-lvar-use fun)) (clambda (when (ref-p ref) (ref-leaf ref))) (creturn (when (lambda-p clambda) (lambda-return clambda))) (result-use (when (return-p creturn) (principal-lvar-use (return-result creturn))))) ;; FIXME: We should be able to deal with multiple uses here as well. (and (dx-combination-p result-use dx) (combination-args-flow-cleanly-p use result-use dx)))))) (defun combination-args-flow-cleanly-p (combination1 combination2 dx) (labels ((recurse (combination) (or (eq combination combination2) (if (known-dx-combination-p combination dx) (let ((dest (lvar-dest (combination-lvar combination)))) (and (combination-p dest) (recurse dest))) (let* ((fun1 (combination-fun combination)) (ref1 (principal-lvar-use fun1)) (clambda1 (when (ref-p ref1) (ref-leaf ref1)))) (when (lambda-p clambda1) (dolist (var (lambda-vars clambda1) t) (dolist (var-ref (lambda-var-refs var)) (let ((dest (lvar-dest (ref-lvar var-ref)))) (unless (and (combination-p dest) (recurse dest)) (return-from combination-args-flow-cleanly-p nil))))))))))) (recurse combination1))) (defun trivial-lambda-var-ref-p (use) (and (ref-p use) (let ((var (ref-leaf use))) ;; lambda-var, no SETS (when (and (lambda-var-p var) (not (lambda-var-sets var))) (let ((home (lambda-var-home var)) (refs (lambda-var-refs var))) ;; bound by a system lambda, no other REFS (when (and (lambda-system-lambda-p home) (eq use (car refs)) (not (cdr refs))) ;; the LAMBDA this var is bound by has only a single REF, going ;; to a combination (let* ((lambda-refs (lambda-refs home)) (primary (car lambda-refs))) (and (ref-p primary) (not (cdr lambda-refs)) (combination-p (lvar-dest (ref-lvar primary))))))))))) (defun trivial-lambda-var-ref-lvar (use) (let* ((this (ref-leaf use)) (home (lambda-var-home this))) (multiple-value-bind (fun vars) (values home (lambda-vars home)) (let* ((combination (lvar-dest (ref-lvar (car (lambda-refs fun))))) (args (combination-args combination))) (assert (= (length vars) (length args))) (loop for var in vars for arg in args when (eq var this) return arg))))) ;;; This needs to play nice with LVAR-GOOD-FOR-DX-P and friends. (defun handle-nested-dynamic-extent-lvars (dx lvar &optional recheck-component) (let ((uses (lvar-uses lvar))) ;; DX value generators must end their blocks: see UPDATE-UVL-LIVE-SETS. ;; Uses of mupltiple-use LVARs already end their blocks, so we just need ;; to process uses of single-use LVARs. (when (node-p uses) (node-ends-block uses)) ;; If this LVAR's USE is good for DX, it is either a CAST, or it ;; must be a regular combination whose arguments are potentially DX as well. (flet ((recurse (use) (etypecase use (cast (handle-nested-dynamic-extent-lvars dx (cast-value use) recheck-component)) (combination (loop for arg in (combination-args use) ;; deleted args show up as NIL here when (and arg (lvar-good-for-dx-p arg dx recheck-component)) append (handle-nested-dynamic-extent-lvars dx arg recheck-component))) (ref (let* ((other (trivial-lambda-var-ref-lvar use))) (unless (eq other lvar) (handle-nested-dynamic-extent-lvars dx other recheck-component))))))) (cons (cons dx lvar) (if (listp uses) (loop for use in uses when (use-good-for-dx-p use dx recheck-component) nconc (recurse use)) (when (use-good-for-dx-p uses dx recheck-component) (recurse uses))))))) ;;;;; BLOCK UTILS (declaim (inline block-to-be-deleted-p)) (defun block-to-be-deleted-p (block) (or (block-delete-p block) (eq (functional-kind (block-home-lambda block)) :deleted))) ;;; Checks whether NODE is in a block to be deleted (declaim (inline node-to-be-deleted-p)) (defun node-to-be-deleted-p (node) (block-to-be-deleted-p (node-block node))) (declaim (ftype (sfunction (clambda) cblock) lambda-block)) (defun lambda-block (clambda) (node-block (lambda-bind clambda))) (declaim (ftype (sfunction (clambda) component) lambda-component)) (defun lambda-component (clambda) (block-component (lambda-block clambda))) (declaim (ftype (sfunction (cblock) node) block-start-node)) (defun block-start-node (block) (ctran-next (block-start block))) ;;; Return the enclosing cleanup for environment of the first or last ;;; node in BLOCK. (defun block-start-cleanup (block) (node-enclosing-cleanup (block-start-node block))) (defun block-end-cleanup (block) (node-enclosing-cleanup (block-last block))) ;;; Return the non-LET LAMBDA that holds BLOCK's code, or NIL ;;; if there is none. ;;; ;;; There can legitimately be no home lambda in dead code early in the ;;; IR1 conversion process, e.g. when IR1-converting the SETQ form in ;;; (BLOCK B (RETURN-FROM B) (SETQ X 3)) ;;; where the block is just a placeholder during parsing and doesn't ;;; actually correspond to code which will be written anywhere. (declaim (ftype (sfunction (cblock) (or clambda null)) block-home-lambda-or-null)) (defun block-home-lambda-or-null (block) (if (node-p (block-last block)) ;; This is the old CMU CL way of doing it. (node-home-lambda (block-last block)) ;; Now that SBCL uses this operation more aggressively than CMU ;; CL did, the old CMU CL way of doing it can fail in two ways. ;; 1. It can fail in a few cases even when a meaningful home ;; lambda exists, e.g. in IR1-CONVERT of one of the legs of ;; an IF. ;; 2. It can fail when converting a form which is born orphaned ;; so that it never had a meaningful home lambda, e.g. a form ;; which follows a RETURN-FROM or GO form. (let ((pred-list (block-pred block))) ;; To deal with case 1, we reason that ;; previous-in-target-execution-order blocks should be in the ;; same lambda, and that they seem in practice to be ;; previous-in-compilation-order blocks too, so we look back ;; to find one which is sufficiently initialized to tell us ;; what the home lambda is. (if pred-list ;; We could get fancy about this, flooding through the ;; graph of all the previous blocks, but in practice it ;; seems to work just to grab the first previous block and ;; use it. (node-home-lambda (block-last (first pred-list))) ;; In case 2, we end up with an empty PRED-LIST and ;; have to punt: There's no home lambda. nil)))) ;;; Return the non-LET LAMBDA that holds BLOCK's code. (declaim (ftype (sfunction (cblock) clambda) block-home-lambda)) (defun block-home-lambda (block) (block-home-lambda-or-null block)) ;;; Return the IR1 physical environment for BLOCK. (declaim (ftype (sfunction (cblock) physenv) block-physenv)) (defun block-physenv (block) (lambda-physenv (block-home-lambda block))) ;;; Return the Top Level Form number of PATH, i.e. the ordinal number ;;; of its original source's top level form in its compilation unit. (defun source-path-tlf-number (path) (declare (list path)) (car (last path))) ;;; Return the (reversed) list for the PATH in the original source ;;; (with the Top Level Form number last). (defun source-path-original-source (path) (declare (list path) (inline member)) (cddr (member 'original-source-start path :test #'eq))) ;;; Return the Form Number of PATH's original source inside the Top ;;; Level Form that contains it. This is determined by the order that ;;; we walk the subforms of the top level source form. (defun source-path-form-number (path) (declare (list path) (inline member)) (cadr (member 'original-source-start path :test #'eq))) ;;; Return a list of all the enclosing forms not in the original ;;; source that converted to get to this form, with the immediate ;;; source for node at the start of the list. (defun source-path-forms (path) (subseq path 0 (position 'original-source-start path))) ;;; Return the innermost source form for NODE. (defun node-source-form (node) (declare (type node node)) (let* ((path (node-source-path node)) (forms (source-path-forms path))) (if forms (first forms) (values (find-original-source path))))) ;;; Return NODE-SOURCE-FORM, T if lvar has a single use, otherwise ;;; NIL, NIL. (defun lvar-source (lvar) (let ((use (lvar-uses lvar))) (if (listp use) (values nil nil) (values (node-source-form use) t)))) ;;; Return the unique node, delivering a value to LVAR. #!-sb-fluid (declaim (inline lvar-use)) (defun lvar-use (lvar) (the (not list) (lvar-uses lvar))) #!-sb-fluid (declaim (inline lvar-has-single-use-p)) (defun lvar-has-single-use-p (lvar) (typep (lvar-uses lvar) '(not list))) ;;; Return the LAMBDA that is CTRAN's home, or NIL if there is none. (declaim (ftype (sfunction (ctran) (or clambda null)) ctran-home-lambda-or-null)) (defun ctran-home-lambda-or-null (ctran) ;; KLUDGE: This function is a post-CMU-CL hack by WHN, and this ;; implementation might not be quite right, or might be uglier than ;; necessary. It appears that the original Python never found a need ;; to do this operation. The obvious things based on ;; NODE-HOME-LAMBDA of CTRAN-USE usually work; then if that fails, ;; BLOCK-HOME-LAMBDA of CTRAN-BLOCK works, given that we ;; generalize it enough to grovel harder when the simple CMU CL ;; approach fails, and furthermore realize that in some exceptional ;; cases it might return NIL. -- WHN 2001-12-04 (cond ((ctran-use ctran) (node-home-lambda (ctran-use ctran))) ((ctran-block ctran) (block-home-lambda-or-null (ctran-block ctran))) (t (bug "confused about home lambda for ~S" ctran)))) ;;; Return the LAMBDA that is CTRAN's home. (declaim (ftype (sfunction (ctran) clambda) ctran-home-lambda)) (defun ctran-home-lambda (ctran) (ctran-home-lambda-or-null ctran)) (declaim (inline cast-single-value-p)) (defun cast-single-value-p (cast) (not (values-type-p (cast-asserted-type cast)))) #!-sb-fluid (declaim (inline lvar-single-value-p)) (defun lvar-single-value-p (lvar) (or (not lvar) (let ((dest (lvar-dest lvar))) (typecase dest ((or creturn exit) nil) (mv-combination (eq (basic-combination-fun dest) lvar)) (cast (locally (declare (notinline lvar-single-value-p)) (and (cast-single-value-p dest) (lvar-single-value-p (node-lvar dest))))) (t t))))) (defun principal-lvar-end (lvar) (loop for prev = lvar then (node-lvar dest) for dest = (and prev (lvar-dest prev)) while (cast-p dest) finally (return (values dest prev)))) (defun principal-lvar-single-valuify (lvar) (loop for prev = lvar then (node-lvar dest) for dest = (and prev (lvar-dest prev)) while (cast-p dest) do (setf (node-derived-type dest) (make-short-values-type (list (single-value-type (node-derived-type dest))))) (reoptimize-lvar prev))) ;;; Return a new LEXENV just like DEFAULT except for the specified ;;; slot values. Values for the alist slots are NCONCed to the ;;; beginning of the current value, rather than replacing it entirely. (defun make-lexenv (&key (default *lexenv*) funs vars blocks tags type-restrictions (lambda (lexenv-lambda default)) (cleanup (lexenv-cleanup default)) (handled-conditions (lexenv-handled-conditions default)) (disabled-package-locks (lexenv-disabled-package-locks default)) (policy (lexenv-policy default))) (macrolet ((frob (var slot) `(let ((old (,slot default))) (if ,var (nconc ,var old) old)))) (internal-make-lexenv (frob funs lexenv-funs) (frob vars lexenv-vars) (frob blocks lexenv-blocks) (frob tags lexenv-tags) (frob type-restrictions lexenv-type-restrictions) lambda cleanup handled-conditions disabled-package-locks policy))) ;;; Makes a LEXENV, suitable for using in a MACROLET introduced ;;; macroexpander (defun make-restricted-lexenv (lexenv) (flet ((fun-good-p (fun) (destructuring-bind (name . thing) fun (declare (ignore name)) (etypecase thing (functional nil) (global-var t) (cons (aver (eq (car thing) 'macro)) t)))) (var-good-p (var) (destructuring-bind (name . thing) var (declare (ignore name)) (etypecase thing ;; The evaluator will mark lexicals with :BOGUS when it ;; translates an interpreter lexenv to a compiler ;; lexenv. ((or leaf #!+sb-eval (member :bogus)) nil) (cons (aver (eq (car thing) 'macro)) t) (heap-alien-info nil))))) (internal-make-lexenv (remove-if-not #'fun-good-p (lexenv-funs lexenv)) (remove-if-not #'var-good-p (lexenv-vars lexenv)) nil nil (lexenv-type-restrictions lexenv) ; XXX nil nil (lexenv-handled-conditions lexenv) (lexenv-disabled-package-locks lexenv) (lexenv-policy lexenv)))) ;;;; flow/DFO/component hackery ;;; Join BLOCK1 and BLOCK2. (defun link-blocks (block1 block2) (declare (type cblock block1 block2)) (setf (block-succ block1) (if (block-succ block1) (%link-blocks block1 block2) (list block2))) (push block1 (block-pred block2)) (values)) (defun %link-blocks (block1 block2) (declare (type cblock block1 block2)) (let ((succ1 (block-succ block1))) (aver (not (memq block2 succ1))) (cons block2 succ1))) ;;; This is like LINK-BLOCKS, but we separate BLOCK1 and BLOCK2. If ;;; this leaves a successor with a single predecessor that ends in an ;;; IF, then set BLOCK-TEST-MODIFIED so that any test constraint will ;;; now be able to be propagated to the successor. (defun unlink-blocks (block1 block2) (declare (type cblock block1 block2)) (let ((succ1 (block-succ block1))) (if (eq block2 (car succ1)) (setf (block-succ block1) (cdr succ1)) (do ((succ (cdr succ1) (cdr succ)) (prev succ1 succ)) ((eq (car succ) block2) (setf (cdr prev) (cdr succ))) (aver succ)))) (let ((new-pred (delq block1 (block-pred block2)))) (setf (block-pred block2) new-pred) (when (singleton-p new-pred) (let ((pred-block (first new-pred))) (when (if-p (block-last pred-block)) (setf (block-test-modified pred-block) t))))) (values)) ;;; Swing the succ/pred link between BLOCK and OLD to be between BLOCK ;;; and NEW. If BLOCK ends in an IF, then we have to fix up the ;;; consequent/alternative blocks to point to NEW. We also set ;;; BLOCK-TEST-MODIFIED so that any test constraint will be applied to ;;; the new successor. (defun change-block-successor (block old new) (declare (type cblock new old block)) (unlink-blocks block old) (let ((last (block-last block)) (comp (block-component block))) (setf (component-reanalyze comp) t) (typecase last (cif (setf (block-test-modified block) t) (let* ((succ-left (block-succ block)) (new (if (and (eq new (component-tail comp)) succ-left) (first succ-left) new))) (unless (memq new succ-left) (link-blocks block new)) (macrolet ((frob (slot) `(when (eq (,slot last) old) (setf (,slot last) new)))) (frob if-consequent) (frob if-alternative) (when (eq (if-consequent last) (if-alternative last)) (reoptimize-component (block-component block) :maybe))))) (t (unless (memq new (block-succ block)) (link-blocks block new))))) (values)) ;;; Unlink a block from the next/prev chain. We also null out the ;;; COMPONENT. (declaim (ftype (sfunction (cblock) (values)) remove-from-dfo)) (defun remove-from-dfo (block) (let ((next (block-next block)) (prev (block-prev block))) (setf (block-component block) nil) (setf (block-next prev) next) (setf (block-prev next) prev)) (values)) ;;; Add BLOCK to the next/prev chain following AFTER. We also set the ;;; COMPONENT to be the same as for AFTER. (defun add-to-dfo (block after) (declare (type cblock block after)) (let ((next (block-next after)) (comp (block-component after))) (aver (not (eq (component-kind comp) :deleted))) (setf (block-component block) comp) (setf (block-next after) block) (setf (block-prev block) after) (setf (block-next block) next) (setf (block-prev next) block)) (values)) ;;; List all NLX-INFOs which BLOCK can exit to. ;;; ;;; We hope that no cleanup actions are performed in the middle of ;;; BLOCK, so it is enough to look only at cleanups in the block ;;; end. The tricky thing is a special cleanup block; all its nodes ;;; have the same cleanup info, corresponding to the start, so the ;;; same approach returns safe result. (defun map-block-nlxes (fun block &optional dx-cleanup-fun) (loop for cleanup = (block-end-cleanup block) then (node-enclosing-cleanup (cleanup-mess-up cleanup)) while cleanup do (let ((mess-up (cleanup-mess-up cleanup))) (case (cleanup-kind cleanup) ((:block :tagbody) (aver (entry-p mess-up)) (loop for exit in (entry-exits mess-up) for nlx-info = (exit-nlx-info exit) do (funcall fun nlx-info))) ((:catch :unwind-protect) (aver (combination-p mess-up)) (let* ((arg-lvar (first (basic-combination-args mess-up))) (nlx-info (constant-value (ref-leaf (lvar-use arg-lvar))))) (funcall fun nlx-info))) ((:dynamic-extent) (when dx-cleanup-fun (funcall dx-cleanup-fun cleanup))))))) ;;; Set the FLAG for all the blocks in COMPONENT to NIL, except for ;;; the head and tail which are set to T. (declaim (ftype (sfunction (component) (values)) clear-flags)) (defun clear-flags (component) (let ((head (component-head component)) (tail (component-tail component))) (setf (block-flag head) t) (setf (block-flag tail) t) (do-blocks (block component) (setf (block-flag block) nil))) (values)) ;;; Make a component with no blocks in it. The BLOCK-FLAG is initially ;;; true in the head and tail blocks. (declaim (ftype (sfunction () component) make-empty-component)) (defun make-empty-component () (let* ((head (make-block-key :start nil :component nil)) (tail (make-block-key :start nil :component nil)) (res (make-component head tail))) (setf (block-flag head) t) (setf (block-flag tail) t) (setf (block-component head) res) (setf (block-component tail) res) (setf (block-next head) tail) (setf (block-prev tail) head) res)) ;;; Make NODE the LAST node in its block, splitting the block if necessary. ;;; The new block is added to the DFO immediately following NODE's block. (defun node-ends-block (node) (declare (type node node)) (let* ((block (node-block node)) (start (node-next node)) (last (block-last block))) (check-type last node) (unless (eq last node) (aver (and (eq (ctran-kind start) :inside-block) (not (block-delete-p block)))) (let* ((succ (block-succ block)) (new-block (make-block-key :start start :component (block-component block) :succ succ :last last))) (setf (ctran-kind start) :block-start) (setf (ctran-use start) nil) (setf (block-last block) node) (setf (node-next node) nil) (dolist (b succ) (setf (block-pred b) (cons new-block (remove block (block-pred b))))) (setf (block-succ block) ()) (link-blocks block new-block) (add-to-dfo new-block block) (setf (component-reanalyze (block-component block)) t) (do ((ctran start (node-next (ctran-next ctran)))) ((not ctran)) (setf (ctran-block ctran) new-block)) (setf (block-type-asserted block) t) (setf (block-test-modified block) t)))) (values)) ;;;; deleting stuff ;;; Deal with deleting the last (read) reference to a LAMBDA-VAR. (defun delete-lambda-var (leaf) (declare (type lambda-var leaf)) ;; Iterate over all local calls flushing the corresponding argument, ;; allowing the computation of the argument to be deleted. We also ;; mark the LET for reoptimization, since it may be that we have ;; deleted its last variable. (let* ((fun (lambda-var-home leaf)) (n (position leaf (lambda-vars fun)))) (dolist (ref (leaf-refs fun)) (let* ((lvar (node-lvar ref)) (dest (and lvar (lvar-dest lvar)))) (when (and (combination-p dest) (eq (basic-combination-fun dest) lvar) (eq (basic-combination-kind dest) :local)) (let* ((args (basic-combination-args dest)) (arg (elt args n))) (reoptimize-lvar arg) (flush-dest arg) (setf (elt args n) nil)))))) ;; The LAMBDA-VAR may still have some SETs, but this doesn't cause ;; too much difficulty, since we can efficiently implement ;; write-only variables. We iterate over the SETs, marking their ;; blocks for dead code flushing, since we can delete SETs whose ;; value is unused. (dolist (set (lambda-var-sets leaf)) (setf (block-flush-p (node-block set)) t)) (values)) ;;; Note that something interesting has happened to VAR. (defun reoptimize-lambda-var (var) (declare (type lambda-var var)) (let ((fun (lambda-var-home var))) ;; We only deal with LET variables, marking the corresponding ;; initial value arg as needing to be reoptimized. (when (and (eq (functional-kind fun) :let) (leaf-refs var)) (do ((args (basic-combination-args (lvar-dest (node-lvar (first (leaf-refs fun))))) (cdr args)) (vars (lambda-vars fun) (cdr vars))) ((eq (car vars) var) (reoptimize-lvar (car args)))))) (values)) ;;; Delete a function that has no references. This need only be called ;;; on functions that never had any references, since otherwise ;;; DELETE-REF will handle the deletion. (defun delete-functional (fun) (aver (and (null (leaf-refs fun)) (not (functional-entry-fun fun)))) (etypecase fun (optional-dispatch (delete-optional-dispatch fun)) (clambda (delete-lambda fun))) (values)) ;;; Deal with deleting the last reference to a CLAMBDA, which means ;;; that the lambda is unreachable, so that its body may be ;;; deleted. We set FUNCTIONAL-KIND to :DELETED and rely on ;;; IR1-OPTIMIZE to delete its blocks. (defun delete-lambda (clambda) (declare (type clambda clambda)) (let ((original-kind (functional-kind clambda)) (bind (lambda-bind clambda))) (aver (not (member original-kind '(:deleted :toplevel)))) (aver (not (functional-has-external-references-p clambda))) (aver (or (eq original-kind :zombie) bind)) (setf (functional-kind clambda) :deleted) (setf (lambda-bind clambda) nil) (labels ((delete-children (lambda) (dolist (child (lambda-children lambda)) (cond ((eq (functional-kind child) :deleted) (delete-children child)) (t (delete-lambda child)))) (setf (lambda-children lambda) nil) (setf (lambda-parent lambda) nil))) (delete-children clambda)) ;; (The IF test is (FUNCTIONAL-SOMEWHAT-LETLIKE-P CLAMBDA), except ;; that we're using the old value of the KIND slot, not the ;; current slot value, which has now been set to :DELETED.) (case original-kind (:zombie) ((:let :mv-let :assignment) (let ((bind-block (node-block bind))) (mark-for-deletion bind-block)) (let ((home (lambda-home clambda))) (setf (lambda-lets home) (delete clambda (lambda-lets home)))) ;; KLUDGE: In presence of NLEs we cannot always understand that ;; LET's BIND dominates its body [for a LET "its" body is not ;; quite its]; let's delete too dangerous for IR2 stuff. -- ;; APD, 2004-01-01 (dolist (var (lambda-vars clambda)) (flet ((delete-node (node) (mark-for-deletion (node-block node)))) (mapc #'delete-node (leaf-refs var)) (mapc #'delete-node (lambda-var-sets var))))) (t ;; Function has no reachable references. (dolist (ref (lambda-refs clambda)) (mark-for-deletion (node-block ref))) ;; If the function isn't a LET, we unlink the function head ;; and tail from the component head and tail to indicate that ;; the code is unreachable. We also delete the function from ;; COMPONENT-LAMBDAS (it won't be there before local call ;; analysis, but no matter.) If the lambda was never ;; referenced, we give a note. (let* ((bind-block (node-block bind)) (component (block-component bind-block)) (return (lambda-return clambda)) (return-block (and return (node-block return)))) (unless (leaf-ever-used clambda) (let ((*compiler-error-context* bind)) (compiler-notify 'code-deletion-note :format-control "deleting unused function~:[.~;~:*~% ~S~]" :format-arguments (list (leaf-debug-name clambda))))) (unless (block-delete-p bind-block) (unlink-blocks (component-head component) bind-block)) (when (and return-block (not (block-delete-p return-block))) (mark-for-deletion return-block) (unlink-blocks return-block (component-tail component))) (setf (component-reanalyze component) t) (let ((tails (lambda-tail-set clambda))) (setf (tail-set-funs tails) (delete clambda (tail-set-funs tails))) (setf (lambda-tail-set clambda) nil)) (setf (component-lambdas component) (delq clambda (component-lambdas component)))))) ;; If the lambda is an XEP, then we null out the ENTRY-FUN in its ;; ENTRY-FUN so that people will know that it is not an entry ;; point anymore. (when (eq original-kind :external) (let ((fun (functional-entry-fun clambda))) (setf (functional-entry-fun fun) nil) (when (optional-dispatch-p fun) (delete-optional-dispatch fun))))) (values)) ;;; Deal with deleting the last reference to an OPTIONAL-DISPATCH. We ;;; have to be a bit more careful than with lambdas, since DELETE-REF ;;; is used both before and after local call analysis. Afterward, all ;;; references to still-existing OPTIONAL-DISPATCHes have been moved ;;; to the XEP, leaving it with no references at all. So we look at ;;; the XEP to see whether an optional-dispatch is still really being ;;; used. But before local call analysis, there are no XEPs, and all ;;; references are direct. ;;; ;;; When we do delete the OPTIONAL-DISPATCH, we grovel all of its ;;; entry-points, making them be normal lambdas, and then deleting the ;;; ones with no references. This deletes any e-p lambdas that were ;;; either never referenced, or couldn't be deleted when the last ;;; reference was deleted (due to their :OPTIONAL kind.) ;;; ;;; Note that the last optional entry point may alias the main entry, ;;; so when we process the main entry, its KIND may have been changed ;;; to NIL or even converted to a LETlike value. (defun delete-optional-dispatch (leaf) (declare (type optional-dispatch leaf)) (let ((entry (functional-entry-fun leaf))) (unless (and entry (leaf-refs entry)) (aver (or (not entry) (eq (functional-kind entry) :deleted))) (setf (functional-kind leaf) :deleted) (flet ((frob (fun) (unless (eq (functional-kind fun) :deleted) (aver (eq (functional-kind fun) :optional)) (setf (functional-kind fun) nil) (let ((refs (leaf-refs fun))) (cond ((null refs) (delete-lambda fun)) ((null (rest refs)) (or (maybe-let-convert fun) (maybe-convert-to-assignment fun))) (t (maybe-convert-to-assignment fun))))))) (dolist (ep (optional-dispatch-entry-points leaf)) (when (promise-ready-p ep) (frob (force ep)))) (when (optional-dispatch-more-entry leaf) (frob (optional-dispatch-more-entry leaf))) (let ((main (optional-dispatch-main-entry leaf))) (when entry (setf (functional-entry-fun entry) main) (setf (functional-entry-fun main) entry)) (when (eq (functional-kind main) :optional) (frob main)))))) (values)) (defun note-local-functional (fun) (declare (type functional fun)) (when (and (leaf-has-source-name-p fun) (eq (leaf-source-name fun) (functional-debug-name fun))) (let ((name (leaf-source-name fun))) (let ((defined-fun (gethash name *free-funs*))) (when (and defined-fun (defined-fun-p defined-fun) (eq (defined-fun-functional defined-fun) fun)) (remhash name *free-funs*)))))) ;;; Return functional for DEFINED-FUN which has been converted in policy ;;; corresponding to the current one, or NIL if no such functional exists. (defun defined-fun-functional (defined-fun) (let ((policy (lexenv-%policy *lexenv*))) (dolist (functional (defined-fun-functionals defined-fun)) (when (equal policy (lexenv-%policy (functional-lexenv functional))) (return functional))))) ;;; Do stuff to delete the semantic attachments of a REF node. When ;;; this leaves zero or one reference, we do a type dispatch off of ;;; the leaf to determine if a special action is appropriate. (defun delete-ref (ref) (declare (type ref ref)) (let* ((leaf (ref-leaf ref)) (refs (delq ref (leaf-refs leaf)))) (setf (leaf-refs leaf) refs) (cond ((null refs) (typecase leaf (lambda-var (delete-lambda-var leaf)) (clambda (ecase (functional-kind leaf) ((nil :let :mv-let :assignment :escape :cleanup) (aver (null (functional-entry-fun leaf))) (delete-lambda leaf)) (:external (delete-lambda leaf)) ((:deleted :zombie :optional)))) (optional-dispatch (unless (eq (functional-kind leaf) :deleted) (delete-optional-dispatch leaf))))) ((null (rest refs)) (typecase leaf (clambda (or (maybe-let-convert leaf) (maybe-convert-to-assignment leaf))) (lambda-var (reoptimize-lambda-var leaf)))) (t (typecase leaf (clambda (maybe-convert-to-assignment leaf)))))) (values)) ;;; This function is called by people who delete nodes; it provides a ;;; way to indicate that the value of a lvar is no longer used. We ;;; null out the LVAR-DEST, set FLUSH-P in the blocks containing uses ;;; of LVAR and set COMPONENT-REOPTIMIZE. (defun flush-dest (lvar) (declare (type (or lvar null) lvar)) (unless (null lvar) (when (lvar-dynamic-extent lvar) (note-no-stack-allocation lvar :flush t)) (setf (lvar-dest lvar) nil) (flush-lvar-externally-checkable-type lvar) (do-uses (use lvar) (let ((prev (node-prev use))) (let ((block (ctran-block prev))) (reoptimize-component (block-component block) t) (setf (block-attributep (block-flags block) flush-p type-asserted type-check) t))) (setf (node-lvar use) nil)) (setf (lvar-uses lvar) nil)) (values)) (defun delete-dest (lvar) (when lvar (let* ((dest (lvar-dest lvar)) (prev (node-prev dest))) (let ((block (ctran-block prev))) (unless (block-delete-p block) (mark-for-deletion block)))))) ;;; Queue the block for deletion (defun delete-block-lazily (block) (declare (type cblock block)) (unless (block-delete-p block) (setf (block-delete-p block) t) (push block (component-delete-blocks (block-component block))))) ;;; Do a graph walk backward from BLOCK, marking all predecessor ;;; blocks with the DELETE-P flag. (defun mark-for-deletion (block) (declare (type cblock block)) (let* ((component (block-component block)) (head (component-head component))) (labels ((helper (block) (delete-block-lazily block) (dolist (pred (block-pred block)) (unless (or (block-delete-p pred) (eq pred head)) (helper pred))))) (unless (block-delete-p block) (helper block) (setf (component-reanalyze component) t)))) (values)) ;;; This function does what is necessary to eliminate the code in it ;;; from the IR1 representation. This involves unlinking it from its ;;; predecessors and successors and deleting various node-specific ;;; semantic information. BLOCK must be already removed from ;;; COMPONENT-DELETE-BLOCKS. (defun delete-block (block &optional silent) (declare (type cblock block)) (aver (block-component block)) ; else block is already deleted! #!+high-security (aver (not (memq block (component-delete-blocks (block-component block))))) (unless silent (note-block-deletion block)) (setf (block-delete-p block) t) (dolist (b (block-pred block)) (unlink-blocks b block) ;; In bug 147 the almost-all-blocks-have-a-successor invariant was ;; broken when successors were deleted without setting the ;; BLOCK-DELETE-P flags of their predececessors. Make sure that ;; doesn't happen again. (aver (not (and (null (block-succ b)) (not (block-delete-p b)) (not (eq b (component-head (block-component b)))))))) (dolist (b (block-succ block)) (unlink-blocks block b)) (do-nodes-carefully (node block) (when (valued-node-p node) (delete-lvar-use node)) (etypecase node (ref (delete-ref node)) (cif (flush-dest (if-test node))) ;; The next two cases serve to maintain the invariant that a LET ;; always has a well-formed COMBINATION, REF and BIND. We delete ;; the lambda whenever we delete any of these, but we must be ;; careful that this LET has not already been partially deleted. (basic-combination (when (and (eq (basic-combination-kind node) :local) ;; Guards COMBINATION-LAMBDA agains the REF being deleted. (lvar-uses (basic-combination-fun node))) (let ((fun (combination-lambda node))) ;; If our REF was the second-to-last ref, and has been ;; deleted, then FUN may be a LET for some other ;; combination. (when (and (functional-letlike-p fun) (eq (let-combination fun) node)) (delete-lambda fun)))) (flush-dest (basic-combination-fun node)) (dolist (arg (basic-combination-args node)) (when arg (flush-dest arg)))) (bind (let ((lambda (bind-lambda node))) (unless (eq (functional-kind lambda) :deleted) (delete-lambda lambda)))) (exit (let ((value (exit-value node)) (entry (exit-entry node))) (when value (flush-dest value)) (when entry (setf (entry-exits entry) (delq node (entry-exits entry)))))) (entry (dolist (exit (entry-exits node)) (mark-for-deletion (node-block exit))) (let ((home (node-home-lambda node))) (setf (lambda-entries home) (delq node (lambda-entries home))))) (creturn (flush-dest (return-result node)) (delete-return node)) (cset (flush-dest (set-value node)) (let ((var (set-var node))) (setf (basic-var-sets var) (delete node (basic-var-sets var))))) (cast (flush-dest (cast-value node))))) (remove-from-dfo block) (values)) ;;; Do stuff to indicate that the return node NODE is being deleted. (defun delete-return (node) (declare (type creturn node)) (let* ((fun (return-lambda node)) (tail-set (lambda-tail-set fun))) (aver (lambda-return fun)) (setf (lambda-return fun) nil) (when (and tail-set (not (find-if #'lambda-return (tail-set-funs tail-set)))) (setf (tail-set-type tail-set) *empty-type*))) (values)) ;;; If any of the VARS in FUN was never referenced and was not ;;; declared IGNORE, then complain. (defun note-unreferenced-vars (fun) (declare (type clambda fun)) (dolist (var (lambda-vars fun)) (unless (or (leaf-ever-used var) (lambda-var-ignorep var)) (let ((*compiler-error-context* (lambda-bind fun))) (unless (policy *compiler-error-context* (= inhibit-warnings 3)) ;; ANSI section "3.2.5 Exceptional Situations in the Compiler" ;; requires this to be no more than a STYLE-WARNING. #-sb-xc-host (compiler-style-warn "The variable ~S is defined but never used." (leaf-debug-name var)) ;; There's no reason to accept this kind of equivocation ;; when compiling our own code, though. #+sb-xc-host (warn "The variable ~S is defined but never used." (leaf-debug-name var))) (setf (leaf-ever-used var) t)))) ; to avoid repeated warnings? -- WHN (values)) (defvar *deletion-ignored-objects* '(t nil)) ;;; Return true if we can find OBJ in FORM, NIL otherwise. We bound ;;; our recursion so that we don't get lost in circular structures. We ;;; ignore the car of forms if they are a symbol (to prevent confusing ;;; function referencess with variables), and we also ignore anything ;;; inside ' or #'. (defun present-in-form (obj form depth) (declare (type (integer 0 20) depth)) (cond ((= depth 20) nil) ((eq obj form) t) ((atom form) nil) (t (let ((first (car form)) (depth (1+ depth))) (if (member first '(quote function)) nil (or (and (not (symbolp first)) (present-in-form obj first depth)) (do ((l (cdr form) (cdr l)) (n 0 (1+ n))) ((or (atom l) (> n 100)) nil) (declare (fixnum n)) (when (present-in-form obj (car l) depth) (return t))))))))) ;;; This function is called on a block immediately before we delete ;;; it. We check to see whether any of the code about to die appeared ;;; in the original source, and emit a note if so. ;;; ;;; If the block was in a lambda is now deleted, then we ignore the ;;; whole block, since this case is picked off in DELETE-LAMBDA. We ;;; also ignore the deletion of CRETURN nodes, since it is somewhat ;;; reasonable for a function to not return, and there is a different ;;; note for that case anyway. ;;; ;;; If the actual source is an atom, then we use a bunch of heuristics ;;; to guess whether this reference really appeared in the original ;;; source: ;;; -- If a symbol, it must be interned and not a keyword. ;;; -- It must not be an easily introduced constant (T or NIL, a fixnum ;;; or a character.) ;;; -- The atom must be "present" in the original source form, and ;;; present in all intervening actual source forms. (defun note-block-deletion (block) (let ((home (block-home-lambda block))) (unless (eq (functional-kind home) :deleted) (do-nodes (node nil block) (let* ((path (node-source-path node)) (first (first path))) (when (or (eq first 'original-source-start) (and (atom first) (or (not (symbolp first)) (let ((pkg (symbol-package first))) (and pkg (not (eq pkg (symbol-package :end)))))) (not (member first *deletion-ignored-objects*)) (not (typep first '(or fixnum character))) (every (lambda (x) (present-in-form first x 0)) (source-path-forms path)) (present-in-form first (find-original-source path) 0))) (unless (return-p node) (let ((*compiler-error-context* node)) (compiler-notify 'code-deletion-note :format-control "deleting unreachable code" :format-arguments nil))) (return)))))) (values)) ;;; Delete a node from a block, deleting the block if there are no ;;; nodes left. We remove the node from the uses of its LVAR. ;;; ;;; If the node is the last node, there must be exactly one successor. ;;; We link all of our precedessors to the successor and unlink the ;;; block. In this case, we return T, otherwise NIL. If no nodes are ;;; left, and the block is a successor of itself, then we replace the ;;; only node with a degenerate exit node. This provides a way to ;;; represent the bodyless infinite loop, given the prohibition on ;;; empty blocks in IR1. (defun unlink-node (node) (declare (type node node)) (when (valued-node-p node) (delete-lvar-use node)) (let* ((ctran (node-next node)) (next (and ctran (ctran-next ctran))) (prev (node-prev node)) (block (ctran-block prev)) (prev-kind (ctran-kind prev)) (last (block-last block))) (setf (block-type-asserted block) t) (setf (block-test-modified block) t) (cond ((or (eq prev-kind :inside-block) (and (eq prev-kind :block-start) (not (eq node last)))) (cond ((eq node last) (setf (block-last block) (ctran-use prev)) (setf (node-next (ctran-use prev)) nil)) (t (setf (ctran-next prev) next) (setf (node-prev next) prev) (when (if-p next) ; AOP wanted (reoptimize-lvar (if-test next))))) (setf (node-prev node) nil) nil) (t (aver (eq prev-kind :block-start)) (aver (eq node last)) (let* ((succ (block-succ block)) (next (first succ))) (aver (singleton-p succ)) (cond ((eq block (first succ)) (with-ir1-environment-from-node node (let ((exit (make-exit))) (setf (ctran-next prev) nil) (link-node-to-previous-ctran exit prev) (setf (block-last block) exit))) (setf (node-prev node) nil) nil) (t (aver (eq (block-start-cleanup block) (block-end-cleanup block))) (unlink-blocks block next) (dolist (pred (block-pred block)) (change-block-successor pred block next)) (when (block-delete-p block) (let ((component (block-component block))) (setf (component-delete-blocks component) (delq block (component-delete-blocks component))))) (remove-from-dfo block) (setf (block-delete-p block) t) (setf (node-prev node) nil) t))))))) ;;; Return true if CTRAN has been deleted, false if it is still a valid ;;; part of IR1. (defun ctran-deleted-p (ctran) (declare (type ctran ctran)) (let ((block (ctran-block ctran))) (or (not (block-component block)) (block-delete-p block)))) ;;; Return true if NODE has been deleted, false if it is still a valid ;;; part of IR1. (defun node-deleted (node) (declare (type node node)) (let ((prev (node-prev node))) (or (not prev) (ctran-deleted-p prev)))) ;;; Delete all the blocks and functions in COMPONENT. We scan first ;;; marking the blocks as DELETE-P to prevent weird stuff from being ;;; triggered by deletion. (defun delete-component (component) (declare (type component component)) (aver (null (component-new-functionals component))) (setf (component-kind component) :deleted) (do-blocks (block component) (delete-block-lazily block)) (dolist (fun (component-lambdas component)) (unless (eq (functional-kind fun) :deleted) (setf (functional-kind fun) nil) (setf (functional-entry-fun fun) nil) (setf (leaf-refs fun) nil) (delete-functional fun))) (clean-component component) (values)) ;;; Remove all pending blocks to be deleted. Return the nearest live ;;; block after or equal to BLOCK. (defun clean-component (component &optional block) (loop while (component-delete-blocks component) ;; actual deletion of a block may queue new blocks do (let ((current (pop (component-delete-blocks component)))) (when (eq block current) (setq block (block-next block))) (delete-block current))) block) ;;; Convert code of the form ;;; (FOO ... (FUN ...) ...) ;;; to ;;; (FOO ... ... ...). ;;; In other words, replace the function combination FUN by its ;;; arguments. If there are any problems with doing this, use GIVE-UP ;;; to blow out of whatever transform called this. Note, as the number ;;; of arguments changes, the transform must be prepared to return a ;;; lambda with a new lambda-list with the correct number of ;;; arguments. (defun splice-fun-args (lvar fun num-args) #!+sb-doc "If LVAR is a call to FUN with NUM-ARGS args, change those arguments to feed directly to the LVAR-DEST of LVAR, which must be a combination. If FUN is :ANY, the function name is not checked." (declare (type lvar lvar) (type symbol fun) (type index num-args)) (let ((outside (lvar-dest lvar)) (inside (lvar-uses lvar))) (aver (combination-p outside)) (unless (combination-p inside) (give-up-ir1-transform)) (let ((inside-fun (combination-fun inside))) (unless (or (eq fun :any) (eq (lvar-fun-name inside-fun) fun)) (give-up-ir1-transform)) (let ((inside-args (combination-args inside))) (unless (= (length inside-args) num-args) (give-up-ir1-transform)) (let* ((outside-args (combination-args outside)) (arg-position (position lvar outside-args)) (before-args (subseq outside-args 0 arg-position)) (after-args (subseq outside-args (1+ arg-position)))) (dolist (arg inside-args) (setf (lvar-dest arg) outside) (flush-lvar-externally-checkable-type arg)) (setf (combination-args inside) nil) (setf (combination-args outside) (append before-args inside-args after-args)) (change-ref-leaf (lvar-uses inside-fun) (find-free-fun 'list "???")) (setf (combination-fun-info inside) (info :function :info 'list) (combination-kind inside) :known) (setf (node-derived-type inside) *wild-type*) (flush-dest lvar) inside-args))))) ;;; Eliminate keyword arguments from the call (leaving the ;;; parameters in place. ;;; ;;; (FOO ... :BAR X :QUUX Y) ;;; becomes ;;; (FOO ... X Y) ;;; ;;; SPECS is a list of (:KEYWORD PARAMETER) specifications. ;;; Returns the list of specified parameters names in the ;;; order they appeared in the call. N-POSITIONAL is the ;;; number of positional arguments in th call. (defun eliminate-keyword-args (call n-positional specs) (let* ((specs (copy-tree specs)) (all (combination-args call)) (new-args (reverse (subseq all 0 n-positional))) (key-args (subseq all n-positional)) (parameters nil) (flushed-keys nil)) (loop while key-args do (let* ((key (pop key-args)) (val (pop key-args)) (keyword (if (constant-lvar-p key) (lvar-value key) (give-up-ir1-transform))) (spec (or (assoc keyword specs :test #'eq) (give-up-ir1-transform)))) (push val new-args) (push key flushed-keys) (push (second spec) parameters) ;; In case of duplicate keys. (setf (second spec) (gensym)))) (dolist (key flushed-keys) (flush-dest key)) (setf (combination-args call) (reverse new-args)) (reverse parameters))) (defun extract-fun-args (lvar fun num-args) (declare (type lvar lvar) (type (or symbol list) fun) (type index num-args)) (let ((fun (if (listp fun) fun (list fun)))) (let ((inside (lvar-uses lvar))) (unless (combination-p inside) (give-up-ir1-transform)) (let ((inside-fun (combination-fun inside))) (unless (member (lvar-fun-name inside-fun) fun) (give-up-ir1-transform)) (let ((inside-args (combination-args inside))) (unless (= (length inside-args) num-args) (give-up-ir1-transform)) (values (lvar-fun-name inside-fun) inside-args)))))) (defun flush-combination (combination) (declare (type combination combination)) (flush-dest (combination-fun combination)) (dolist (arg (combination-args combination)) (flush-dest arg)) (unlink-node combination) (values)) ;;;; leaf hackery ;;; Change the LEAF that a REF refers to. (defun change-ref-leaf (ref leaf) (declare (type ref ref) (type leaf leaf)) (unless (eq (ref-leaf ref) leaf) (push ref (leaf-refs leaf)) (delete-ref ref) (setf (ref-leaf ref) leaf) (setf (leaf-ever-used leaf) t) (let* ((ltype (leaf-type leaf)) (vltype (make-single-value-type ltype))) (if (let* ((lvar (node-lvar ref)) (dest (and lvar (lvar-dest lvar)))) (and (basic-combination-p dest) (eq lvar (basic-combination-fun dest)) (csubtypep ltype (specifier-type 'function)))) (setf (node-derived-type ref) vltype) (derive-node-type ref vltype))) (reoptimize-lvar (node-lvar ref))) (values)) ;;; Change all REFS for OLD-LEAF to NEW-LEAF. (defun substitute-leaf (new-leaf old-leaf) (declare (type leaf new-leaf old-leaf)) (dolist (ref (leaf-refs old-leaf)) (change-ref-leaf ref new-leaf)) (values)) ;;; like SUBSITUTE-LEAF, only there is a predicate on the REF to tell ;;; whether to substitute (defun substitute-leaf-if (test new-leaf old-leaf) (declare (type leaf new-leaf old-leaf) (type function test)) (dolist (ref (leaf-refs old-leaf)) (when (funcall test ref) (change-ref-leaf ref new-leaf))) (values)) ;;; Return a LEAF which represents the specified constant object. If ;;; the object is not in *CONSTANTS*, then we create a new constant ;;; LEAF and enter it. If we are producing a fasl file, make sure that ;;; MAKE-LOAD-FORM gets used on any parts of the constant that it ;;; needs to be. ;;; ;;; We are allowed to coalesce things like EQUAL strings and bit-vectors ;;; when file-compiling, but not when using COMPILE. (defun find-constant (object &optional (name nil namep)) (let ((faslp (producing-fasl-file))) (labels ((make-it () (when faslp (if namep (maybe-emit-make-load-forms object name) (maybe-emit-make-load-forms object))) (make-constant object)) (core-coalesce-p (x) ;; True for things which retain their identity under EQUAL, ;; so we can safely share the same CONSTANT leaf between ;; multiple references. (or (typep x '(or symbol number character)) ;; Amusingly enough, we see CLAMBDAs --among other things-- ;; here, from compiling things like %ALLOCATE-CLOSUREs forms. ;; No point in stuffing them in the hash-table. (and (typep x 'instance) (not (or (leaf-p x) (node-p x)))))) (file-coalesce-p (x) ;; CLHS 3.2.4.2.2: We are also allowed to coalesce various ;; other things when file-compiling. (or (core-coalesce-p x) (if (consp x) (if (eq +code-coverage-unmarked+ (cdr x)) ;; These are already coalesced, and the CAR should ;; always be OK, so no need to check. t (unless (maybe-cyclic-p x) ; safe for EQUAL? (do ((y x (cdr y))) ((atom y) (file-coalesce-p y)) (unless (file-coalesce-p (car y)) (return nil))))) ;; We *could* coalesce base-strings as well, ;; but we'd need a separate hash-table for ;; that, since we are not allowed to coalesce ;; base-strings with non-base-strings. (typep x '(or bit-vector ;; in the cross-compiler, we coalesce ;; all strings with the same contents, ;; because we will end up dumping them ;; as base-strings anyway. In the ;; real compiler, we're not allowed to ;; coalesce regardless of string ;; specialized element type, so we ;; KLUDGE by coalescing only character ;; strings (the common case) and ;; punting on the other types. #+sb-xc-host string #-sb-xc-host (vector character)))))) (coalescep (x) (if faslp (file-coalesce-p x) (core-coalesce-p x)))) (if (and (boundp '*constants*) (coalescep object)) (or (gethash object *constants*) (setf (gethash object *constants*) (make-it))) (make-it))))) ;;; Return true if VAR would have to be closed over if environment ;;; analysis ran now (i.e. if there are any uses that have a different ;;; home lambda than VAR's home.) (defun closure-var-p (var) (declare (type lambda-var var)) (let ((home (lambda-var-home var))) (cond ((eq (functional-kind home) :deleted) nil) (t (let ((home (lambda-home home))) (flet ((frob (l) (find home l :key #'node-home-lambda :test #'neq))) (or (frob (leaf-refs var)) (frob (basic-var-sets var))))))))) ;;; If there is a non-local exit noted in ENTRY's environment that ;;; exits to CONT in that entry, then return it, otherwise return NIL. (defun find-nlx-info (exit) (declare (type exit exit)) (let* ((entry (exit-entry exit)) (cleanup (entry-cleanup entry)) (block (first (block-succ (node-block exit))))) (dolist (nlx (physenv-nlx-info (node-physenv entry)) nil) (when (and (eq (nlx-info-block nlx) block) (eq (nlx-info-cleanup nlx) cleanup)) (return nlx))))) (defun nlx-info-lvar (nlx) (declare (type nlx-info nlx)) (node-lvar (block-last (nlx-info-target nlx)))) ;;;; functional hackery (declaim (ftype (sfunction (functional) clambda) main-entry)) (defun main-entry (functional) (etypecase functional (clambda functional) (optional-dispatch (optional-dispatch-main-entry functional)))) ;;; RETURN true if FUNCTIONAL is a thing that can be treated like ;;; MV-BIND when it appears in an MV-CALL. All fixed arguments must be ;;; optional with null default and no SUPPLIED-P. There must be a ;;; &REST arg with no references. (declaim (ftype (sfunction (functional) boolean) looks-like-an-mv-bind)) (defun looks-like-an-mv-bind (functional) (and (optional-dispatch-p functional) (do ((arg (optional-dispatch-arglist functional) (cdr arg))) ((null arg) nil) (let ((info (lambda-var-arg-info (car arg)))) (unless info (return nil)) (case (arg-info-kind info) (:optional (when (or (arg-info-supplied-p info) (arg-info-default info)) (return nil))) (:rest (return (and (null (cdr arg)) (null (leaf-refs (car arg)))))) (t (return nil))))))) ;;; Return true if function is an external entry point. This is true ;;; of normal XEPs (:EXTERNAL kind) and also of top level lambdas ;;; (:TOPLEVEL kind.) (defun xep-p (fun) (declare (type functional fun)) (not (null (member (functional-kind fun) '(:external :toplevel))))) ;;; If LVAR's only use is a non-notinline global function reference, ;;; then return the referenced symbol, otherwise NIL. If NOTINLINE-OK ;;; is true, then we don't care if the leaf is NOTINLINE. (defun lvar-fun-name (lvar &optional notinline-ok) (declare (type lvar lvar)) (let ((use (lvar-uses lvar))) (if (ref-p use) (let ((leaf (ref-leaf use))) (if (and (global-var-p leaf) (eq (global-var-kind leaf) :global-function) (or (not (defined-fun-p leaf)) (not (eq (defined-fun-inlinep leaf) :notinline)) notinline-ok)) (leaf-source-name leaf) nil)) nil))) (defun lvar-fun-debug-name (lvar) (declare (type lvar lvar)) (let ((uses (lvar-uses lvar))) (flet ((name1 (use) (leaf-debug-name (ref-leaf use)))) (if (ref-p uses) (name1 uses) (mapcar #'name1 uses))))) ;;; Return the source name of a combination. (This is an idiom ;;; which was used in CMU CL. I gather it always works. -- WHN) (defun combination-fun-source-name (combination &optional (errorp t)) (let ((leaf (ref-leaf (lvar-uses (combination-fun combination))))) (when (or errorp (leaf-has-source-name-p leaf)) (leaf-source-name leaf)))) ;;; Return the COMBINATION node that is the call to the LET FUN. (defun let-combination (fun) (declare (type clambda fun)) (aver (functional-letlike-p fun)) (lvar-dest (node-lvar (first (leaf-refs fun))))) ;;; Return the initial value lvar for a LET variable, or NIL if there ;;; is none. (defun let-var-initial-value (var) (declare (type lambda-var var)) (let ((fun (lambda-var-home var))) (elt (combination-args (let-combination fun)) (position-or-lose var (lambda-vars fun))))) ;;; Return the LAMBDA that is called by the local CALL. (defun combination-lambda (call) (declare (type basic-combination call)) (aver (eq (basic-combination-kind call) :local)) (ref-leaf (lvar-uses (basic-combination-fun call)))) (defvar *inline-expansion-limit* 200 #!+sb-doc "an upper limit on the number of inline function calls that will be expanded in any given code object (single function or block compilation)") ;;; Check whether NODE's component has exceeded its inline expansion ;;; limit, and warn if so, returning NIL. (defun inline-expansion-ok (node) (let ((expanded (incf (component-inline-expansions (block-component (node-block node)))))) (cond ((> expanded *inline-expansion-limit*) nil) ((= expanded *inline-expansion-limit*) ;; FIXME: If the objective is to stop the recursive ;; expansion of inline functions, wouldn't it be more ;; correct to look back through surrounding expansions ;; (which are, I think, stored in the *CURRENT-PATH*, and ;; possibly stored elsewhere too) and suppress expansion ;; and print this warning when the function being proposed ;; for inline expansion is found there? (I don't like the ;; arbitrary numerical limit in principle, and I think ;; it'll be a nuisance in practice if we ever want the ;; compiler to be able to use WITH-COMPILATION-UNIT on ;; arbitrarily huge blocks of code. -- WHN) (let ((*compiler-error-context* node)) (compiler-notify "*INLINE-EXPANSION-LIMIT* (~W) was exceeded, ~ probably trying to~% ~ inline a recursive function." *inline-expansion-limit*)) nil) (t t)))) ;;; Make sure that FUNCTIONAL is not let-converted or deleted. (defun assure-functional-live-p (functional) (declare (type functional functional)) (when (and (or ;; looks LET-converted (functional-somewhat-letlike-p functional) ;; It's possible for a LET-converted function to end up ;; deleted later. In that case, for the purposes of this ;; analysis, it is LET-converted: LET-converted functionals ;; are too badly trashed to expand them inline, and deleted ;; LET-converted functionals are even worse. (memq (functional-kind functional) '(:deleted :zombie)))) (throw 'locall-already-let-converted functional))) (defun call-full-like-p (call) (declare (type combination call)) (let ((kind (basic-combination-kind call))) (or (eq kind :full) (and (eq kind :known) (let ((info (basic-combination-fun-info call))) (and (not (fun-info-ir2-convert info)) (dolist (template (fun-info-templates info) t) (when (eq (template-ltn-policy template) :fast-safe) (multiple-value-bind (val win) (valid-fun-use call (template-type template)) (when (or val (not win)) (return nil))))))))))) ;;;; careful call ;;; Apply a function to some arguments, returning a list of the values ;;; resulting of the evaluation. If an error is signalled during the ;;; application, then we produce a warning message using WARN-FUN and ;;; return NIL as our second value to indicate this. NODE is used as ;;; the error context for any error message, and CONTEXT is a string ;;; that is spliced into the warning. (declaim (ftype (sfunction ((or symbol function) list node function string) (values list boolean)) careful-call)) (defun careful-call (function args node warn-fun context) (values (multiple-value-list (handler-case (apply function args) (error (condition) (let ((*compiler-error-context* node)) (funcall warn-fun "Lisp error during ~A:~%~A" context condition) (return-from careful-call (values nil nil)))))) t)) ;;; Variations of SPECIFIER-TYPE for parsing possibly wrong ;;; specifiers. (macrolet ((deffrob (basic careful compiler transform) `(progn (defun ,careful (specifier) (handler-case (,basic specifier) (sb!kernel::arg-count-error (condition) (values nil (list (format nil "~A" condition)))) (simple-error (condition) (values nil (list* (simple-condition-format-control condition) (simple-condition-format-arguments condition)))))) (defun ,compiler (specifier) (multiple-value-bind (type error-args) (,careful specifier) (or type (apply #'compiler-error error-args)))) (defun ,transform (specifier) (multiple-value-bind (type error-args) (,careful specifier) (or type (apply #'give-up-ir1-transform error-args))))))) (deffrob specifier-type careful-specifier-type compiler-specifier-type ir1-transform-specifier-type) (deffrob values-specifier-type careful-values-specifier-type compiler-values-specifier-type ir1-transform-values-specifier-type)) ;;;; utilities used at run-time for parsing &KEY args in IR1 ;;; This function is used by the result of PARSE-DEFTRANSFORM to find ;;; the lvar for the value of the &KEY argument KEY in the list of ;;; lvars ARGS. It returns the lvar if the keyword is present, or NIL ;;; otherwise. The legality and constantness of the keywords should ;;; already have been checked. (declaim (ftype (sfunction (list keyword) (or lvar null)) find-keyword-lvar)) (defun find-keyword-lvar (args key) (do ((arg args (cddr arg))) ((null arg) nil) (when (eq (lvar-value (first arg)) key) (return (second arg))))) ;;; This function is used by the result of PARSE-DEFTRANSFORM to ;;; verify that alternating lvars in ARGS are constant and that there ;;; is an even number of args. (declaim (ftype (sfunction (list) boolean) check-key-args-constant)) (defun check-key-args-constant (args) (do ((arg args (cddr arg))) ((null arg) t) (unless (and (rest arg) (constant-lvar-p (first arg))) (return nil)))) ;;; This function is used by the result of PARSE-DEFTRANSFORM to ;;; verify that the list of lvars ARGS is a well-formed &KEY arglist ;;; and that only keywords present in the list KEYS are supplied. (declaim (ftype (sfunction (list list) boolean) check-transform-keys)) (defun check-transform-keys (args keys) (and (check-key-args-constant args) (do ((arg args (cddr arg))) ((null arg) t) (unless (member (lvar-value (first arg)) keys) (return nil))))) ;;;; miscellaneous ;;; Called by the expansion of the EVENT macro. (declaim (ftype (sfunction (event-info (or node null)) *) %event)) (defun %event (info node) (incf (event-info-count info)) (when (and (>= (event-info-level info) *event-note-threshold*) (policy (or node *lexenv*) (= inhibit-warnings 0))) (let ((*compiler-error-context* node)) (compiler-notify (event-info-description info)))) (let ((action (event-info-action info))) (when action (funcall action node)))) ;;; (defun make-cast (value type policy) (declare (type lvar value) (type ctype type) (type policy policy)) (%make-cast :asserted-type type :type-to-check (maybe-weaken-check type policy) :value value :derived-type (coerce-to-values type))) (defun cast-type-check (cast) (declare (type cast cast)) (when (cast-reoptimize cast) (ir1-optimize-cast cast t)) (cast-%type-check cast)) (defun note-single-valuified-lvar (lvar) (declare (type (or lvar null) lvar)) (when lvar (let ((use (lvar-uses lvar))) (cond ((ref-p use) (let ((leaf (ref-leaf use))) (when (and (lambda-var-p leaf) (null (rest (leaf-refs leaf)))) (reoptimize-lambda-var leaf)))) ((or (listp use) (combination-p use)) (do-uses (node lvar) (setf (node-reoptimize node) t) (setf (block-reoptimize (node-block node)) t) (reoptimize-component (node-component node) :maybe))))))) ;;; Return true if LVAR's only use is a non-NOTINLINE reference to a ;;; global function with one of the specified NAMES. (defun lvar-fun-is (lvar names) (declare (type lvar lvar) (list names)) (let ((use (lvar-uses lvar))) (and (ref-p use) (let ((leaf (ref-leaf use))) (and (global-var-p leaf) (eq (global-var-kind leaf) :global-function) (not (null (member (leaf-source-name leaf) names :test #'equal)))))))) (defun lvar-matches (lvar &key fun-names arg-count) (let ((use (lvar-use lvar))) (and (combination-p use) (or (not fun-names) (member (combination-fun-source-name use) fun-names :test #'eq)) (or (not arg-count) (= arg-count (length (combination-args use)))))))