;;;; structures for the first intermediate representation in the ;;;; compiler, IR1 ;;;; 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") ;;; The front-end data structure (IR1) is composed of nodes and ;;; continuations. The general idea is that continuations contain ;;; top-down information and nodes contain bottom-up, derived ;;; information. A continuation represents a place in the code, while ;;; a node represents code that does something. ;;; ;;; This representation is more of a flow-graph than an augmented ;;; syntax tree. The evaluation order is explicitly represented in the ;;; linkage by continuations, rather than being implicit in the nodes ;;; which receive the the results of evaluation. This allows us to ;;; decouple the flow of results from the flow of control. A ;;; continuation represents both, but the continuation can represent ;;; the case of a discarded result by having no DEST. (def!struct (continuation (:make-load-form-fun ignore-it) (:constructor make-continuation (&optional dest))) ;; An indication of the way that this continuation is currently used: ;; ;; :UNUSED ;; A continuation for which all control-related slots have the ;; default values. A continuation is unused during IR1 conversion ;; until it is assigned a block, and may be also be temporarily ;; unused during later manipulations of IR1. In a consistent ;; state there should never be any mention of :UNUSED ;; continuations. Next can have a non-null value if the next node ;; has already been determined. ;; ;; :DELETED ;; A continuation that has been deleted from IR1. Any pointers into ;; IR1 are cleared. There are two conditions under which a deleted ;; continuation may appear in code: ;; -- The CONT of the LAST node in a block may be a deleted ;; continuation when the original receiver of the continuation's ;; value was deleted. Note that DEST in a deleted continuation is ;; null, so it is easy to know not to attempt delivering any ;; values to the continuation. ;; -- Unreachable code that hasn't been deleted yet may receive ;; deleted continuations. All such code will be in blocks that ;; have DELETE-P set. All unreachable code is deleted by control ;; optimization, so the backend doesn't have to worry about this. ;; ;; :BLOCK-START ;; The continuation that is the START of BLOCK. This is the only kind ;; of continuation that can have more than one use. The BLOCK's ;; START-USES is a list of all the uses. ;; ;; :DELETED-BLOCK-START ;; Like :BLOCK-START, but BLOCK has been deleted. A block ;; starting continuation is made into a deleted block start when ;; the block is deleted, but the continuation still may have ;; value semantics. Since there isn't any code left, next is ;; null. ;; ;; :INSIDE-BLOCK ;; A continuation that is the CONT of some node in BLOCK. (kind :unused :type (member :unused :deleted :inside-block :block-start :deleted-block-start)) ;; The node which receives this value, if any. In a deleted continuation, ;; this is null even though the node that receives this continuation may not ;; yet be deleted. (dest nil :type (or node null)) ;; If this is a NODE, then it is the node which is to be evaluated ;; next. This is always null in :DELETED and :UNUSED continuations, ;; and will be null in a :INSIDE-BLOCK continuation when this is the ;; CONT of the LAST. (next nil :type (or node null)) ;; an assertion on the type of this continuation's value (asserted-type *wild-type* :type ctype) ;; cached type of this continuation's value. If NIL, then this must ;; be recomputed: see CONTINUATION-DERIVED-TYPE. (%derived-type nil :type (or ctype null)) ;; Node where this continuation is used, if unique. This is always ;; null in :DELETED and :UNUSED continuations, and is never null in ;; :INSIDE-BLOCK continuations. In a :BLOCK-START continuation, the ;; Block's START-USES indicate whether NIL means no uses or more ;; than one use. (use nil :type (or node null)) ;; the basic block this continuation is in. This is null only in ;; :DELETED and :UNUSED continuations. Note that blocks that are ;; unreachable but still in the DFO may receive deleted ;; continuations, so it isn't o.k. to assume that any continuation ;; that you pick up out of its DEST node has a BLOCK. (block nil :type (or cblock null)) ;; set to true when something about this continuation's value has ;; changed. See REOPTIMIZE-CONTINUATION. This provides a way for IR1 ;; optimize to determine which operands to a node have changed. If ;; the optimizer for this node type doesn't care, it can elect not ;; to clear this flag. (reoptimize t :type boolean) ;; an indication of what we have proven about how this contination's ;; type assertion is satisfied: ;; ;; NIL ;; No type check is necessary (proven type is a subtype of the assertion.) ;; ;; T ;; A type check is needed. ;; ;; :DELETED ;; Don't do a type check, but believe (intersect) the assertion. ;; A T check can be changed to :DELETED if we somehow prove the ;; check is unnecessary, or if we eliminate it through a policy ;; decision. ;; ;; :NO-CHECK ;; Type check generation sets the slot to this if a check is ;; called for, but it believes it has proven that the check won't ;; be done for policy reasons or because a safe implementation ;; will be used. In the latter case, LTN must ensure that a safe ;; implementation *is* used. ;; ;; :ERROR ;; There is a compile-time type error in some use of this ;; continuation. A type check should still be generated, but be ;; careful. ;; ;; This is computed lazily by CONTINUATION-DERIVED-TYPE, so use ;; CONTINUATION-TYPE-CHECK instead of the %'ed slot accessor. (%type-check t :type (member t nil :deleted :no-check :error)) ;; something or other that the back end annotates this continuation with (info nil) ;; uses of this continuation in the lexical environment. They are ;; recorded so that when one continuation is substituted for another ;; the environment may be updated properly. (lexenv-uses nil :type list)) (def!method print-object ((x continuation) stream) (print-unreadable-object (x stream :type t :identity t))) (defstruct (node (:constructor nil) (:copier nil)) ;; the bottom-up derived type for this node. This does not take into ;; consideration output type assertions on this node (actually on its CONT). (derived-type *wild-type* :type ctype) ;; True if this node needs to be optimized. This is set to true ;; whenever something changes about the value of a continuation ;; whose DEST is this node. (reoptimize t :type boolean) ;; the continuation which receives the value of this node. This also ;; indicates what we do controlwise after evaluating this node. This ;; may be null during IR1 conversion. (cont nil :type (or continuation null)) ;; the continuation that this node is the next of. This is null ;; during IR1 conversion when we haven't linked the node in yet or ;; in nodes that have been deleted from the IR1 by UNLINK-NODE. (prev nil :type (or continuation null)) ;; the lexical environment this node was converted in (lexenv *lexenv* :type lexenv) ;; a representation of the source code responsible for generating ;; this node ;; ;; For a form introduced by compilation (does not appear in the ;; original source), the path begins with a list of all the ;; enclosing introduced forms. This list is from the inside out, ;; with the form immediately responsible for this node at the head ;; of the list. ;; ;; Following the introduced forms is a representation of the ;; location of the enclosing original source form. This transition ;; is indicated by the magic ORIGINAL-SOURCE-START marker. The first ;; element of the orignal source is the "form number", which is the ;; ordinal number of this form in a depth-first, left-to-right walk ;; of the truly top-level form in which this appears. ;; ;; Following is a list of integers describing the path taken through ;; the source to get to this point: ;; (K L M ...) => (NTH K (NTH L (NTH M ...))) ;; ;; The last element in the list is the top-level form number, which ;; is the ordinal number (in this call to the compiler) of the truly ;; top-level form containing the orignal source. (source-path *current-path* :type list) ;; If this node is in a tail-recursive position, then this is set to ;; T. At the end of IR1 (in environment analysis) this is computed ;; for all nodes (after cleanup code has been emitted). Before then, ;; a non-null value indicates that IR1 optimization has converted a ;; tail local call to a direct transfer. ;; ;; If the back-end breaks tail-recursion for some reason, then it ;; can null out this slot. (tail-p nil :type boolean)) ;;; Flags that are used to indicate various things about a block, such ;;; as what optimizations need to be done on it: ;;; -- REOPTIMIZE is set when something interesting happens the uses of a ;;; continuation whose Dest is in this block. This indicates that the ;;; value-driven (forward) IR1 optimizations should be done on this block. ;;; -- FLUSH-P is set when code in this block becomes potentially flushable, ;;; usually due to a continuation's DEST becoming null. ;;; -- TYPE-CHECK is true when the type check phase should be run on this ;;; block. IR1 optimize can introduce new blocks after type check has ;;; already run. We need to check these blocks, but there is no point in ;;; checking blocks we have already checked. ;;; -- DELETE-P is true when this block is used to indicate that this block ;;; has been determined to be unreachable and should be deleted. IR1 ;;; phases should not attempt to examine or modify blocks with DELETE-P ;;; set, since they may: ;;; - be in the process of being deleted, or ;;; - have no successors, or ;;; - receive :DELETED continuations. ;;; -- TYPE-ASSERTED, TEST-MODIFIED ;;; These flags are used to indicate that something in this block ;;; might be of interest to constraint propagation. TYPE-ASSERTED ;;; is set when a continuation type assertion is strengthened. ;;; TEST-MODIFIED is set whenever the test for the ending IF has ;;; changed (may be true when there is no IF.) (def-boolean-attribute block reoptimize flush-p type-check delete-p type-asserted test-modified) (macrolet ((frob (slot) `(defmacro ,(symbolicate "BLOCK-" slot) (block) `(block-attributep (block-flags ,block) ,',slot)))) (frob reoptimize) (frob flush-p) (frob type-check) (frob delete-p) (frob type-asserted) (frob test-modified)) ;;; The CBLOCK structure represents a basic block. We include ;;; SSET-ELEMENT so that we can have sets of blocks. Initially the ;;; SSET-ELEMENT-NUMBER is null, DFO analysis numbers in reverse DFO. ;;; During IR2 conversion, IR1 blocks are re-numbered in forward emit ;;; order. This latter numbering also forms the basis of the block ;;; numbering in the debug-info (though that is relative to the start ;;; of the function.) (defstruct (cblock (:include sset-element) (:constructor make-block (start)) (:constructor make-block-key) (:conc-name block-) (:predicate block-p) (:copier copy-block)) ;; a list of all the blocks that are predecessors/successors of this ;; block. In well-formed IR1, most blocks will have one successor. ;; The only exceptions are: ;; 1. component head blocks (any number) ;; 2. blocks ending in an IF (1 or 2) ;; 3. blocks with DELETE-P set (zero) (pred nil :type list) (succ nil :type list) ;; the continuation which heads this block (either a :BLOCK-START or ;; :DELETED-BLOCK-START), or NIL when we haven't made the start ;; continuation yet (and in the dummy component head and tail ;; blocks) (start nil :type (or continuation null)) ;; a list of all the nodes that have START as their CONT (start-uses nil :type list) ;; the last node in this block. This is NIL when we are in the ;; process of building a block (and in the dummy component head and ;; tail blocks.) (last nil :type (or node null)) ;; the forward and backward links in the depth-first ordering of the ;; blocks. These slots are NIL at beginning/end. (next nil :type (or null cblock)) (prev nil :type (or null cblock)) ;; This block's attributes: see above. (flags (block-attributes reoptimize flush-p type-check type-asserted test-modified) :type attributes) ;; Some sets used by constraint propagation. (kill nil) (gen nil) (in nil) (out nil) ;; the component this block is in, or NIL temporarily during IR1 ;; conversion and in deleted blocks (component *current-component* :type (or component null)) ;; a flag used by various graph-walking code to determine whether ;; this block has been processed already or what. We make this ;; initially NIL so that FIND-INITIAL-DFO doesn't have to scan the ;; entire initial component just to clear the flags. (flag nil) ;; Some kind of info used by the back end. (info nil) ;; If true, then constraints that hold in this block and its ;; successors by merit of being tested by its IF predecessor. (test-constraint nil :type (or sset null))) (def!method print-object ((cblock cblock) stream) (print-unreadable-object (cblock stream :type t :identity t) (format stream ":START c~D" (cont-num (block-start cblock))))) ;;; The Block-Annotation structure is shared (via :INCLUDE) by ;;; different block-info annotation structures so that code ;;; (specifically control analysis) can be shared. (defstruct (block-annotation (:constructor nil) (:copier nil)) ;; The IR1 block that this block is in the INFO for. (block (required-argument) :type cblock) ;; the next and previous block in emission order (not DFO). This ;; determines which block we drop though to, and also used to chain ;; together overflow blocks that result from splitting of IR2 blocks ;; in lifetime analysis. (next nil :type (or block-annotation null)) (prev nil :type (or block-annotation null))) ;;; The Component structure provides a handle on a connected piece of ;;; the flow graph. Most of the passes in the compiler operate on ;;; components rather than on the entire flow graph. (defstruct (component (:copier nil)) ;; The kind of component: ;; ;; NIL ;; An ordinary component, containing non-top-level code. ;; ;; :Top-Level ;; A component containing only load-time code. ;; ;; :Complex-Top-Level ;; A component containing both top-level and run-time code. ;; ;; :Initial ;; The result of initial IR1 conversion, on which component ;; analysis has not been done. ;; ;; :Deleted ;; Debris left over from component analysis. (kind nil :type (member nil :top-level :complex-top-level :initial :deleted)) ;; The blocks that are the dummy head and tail of the DFO. ;; Entry/exit points have these blocks as their ;; predecessors/successors. Null temporarily. The start and return ;; from each non-deleted function is linked to the component head ;; and tail. Until environment analysis links NLX entry stubs to the ;; component head, every successor of the head is a function start ;; (i.e. begins with a Bind node.) (head nil :type (or null cblock)) (tail nil :type (or null cblock)) ;; A list of the CLambda structures for all functions in this ;; component. Optional-Dispatches are represented only by their XEP ;; and other associated lambdas. This doesn't contain any deleted or ;; let lambdas. (lambdas () :type list) ;; A list of Functional structures for functions that are newly ;; converted, and haven't been local-call analyzed yet. Initially ;; functions are not in the Lambdas list. LOCAL-CALL-ANALYZE moves ;; them there (possibly as LETs, or implicitly as XEPs if an ;; OPTIONAL-DISPATCH.) Between runs of LOCAL-CALL-ANALYZE there may ;; be some debris of converted or even deleted functions in this ;; list. (new-functions () :type list) ;; If true, then there is stuff in this component that could benefit ;; from further IR1 optimization. (reoptimize t :type boolean) ;; If true, then the control flow in this component was messed up by ;; IR1 optimizations. The DFO should be recomputed. (reanalyze nil :type boolean) ;; String that is some sort of name for the code in this component. (name "" :type simple-string) ;; Some kind of info used by the back end. (info nil) ;; The Source-Info structure describing where this component was ;; compiled from. (source-info *source-info* :type source-info) ;; Count of the number of inline expansions we have done while ;; compiling this component, to detect infinite or exponential ;; blowups. (inline-expansions 0 :type index) ;; A hashtable from combination nodes to things describing how an ;; optimization of the node failed. The value is an alist (Transform ;; . Args), where Transform is the structure describing the ;; transform that failed, and Args is either a list of format ;; arguments for the note, or the FUNCTION-TYPE that would have ;; enabled the transformation but failed to match. (failed-optimizations (make-hash-table :test 'eq) :type hash-table) ;; Similar to NEW-FUNCTIONS, but is used when a function has already ;; been analyzed, but new references have been added by inline ;; expansion. Unlike NEW-FUNCTIONS, this is not disjoint from ;; COMPONENT-LAMBDAS. (reanalyze-functions nil :type list)) (defprinter (component) name (reanalyze :test reanalyze)) ;;; The CLEANUP structure represents some dynamic binding action. ;;; Blocks are annotated with the current cleanup so that dynamic ;;; bindings can be removed when control is transferred out of the ;;; binding environment. We arrange for changes in dynamic bindings to ;;; happen at block boundaries, so that cleanup code may easily be ;;; inserted. The "mess-up" action is explicitly represented by a ;;; funny function call or Entry node. ;;; ;;; We guarantee that cleanups only need to be done at block boundaries ;;; by requiring that the exit continuations initially head their ;;; blocks, and then by not merging blocks when there is a cleanup ;;; change. (defstruct (cleanup (:copier nil)) ;; The kind of thing that has to be cleaned up. (kind (required-argument) :type (member :special-bind :catch :unwind-protect :block :tagbody)) ;; The node that messes things up. This is the last node in the ;; non-messed-up environment. Null only temporarily. This could be ;; deleted due to unreachability. (mess-up nil :type (or node null)) ;; A list of all the NLX-Info structures whose NLX-Info-Cleanup is ;; this cleanup. This is filled in by environment analysis. (nlx-info nil :type list)) (defprinter (cleanup) kind mess-up (nlx-info :test nlx-info)) ;;; The ENVIRONMENT structure represents the result of environment analysis. (defstruct (environment (:copier nil)) ;; the function that allocates this environment (function (required-argument) :type clambda) ;; a list of all the lambdas that allocate variables in this environment (lambdas nil :type list) ;; a list of all the lambda-vars and NLX-Infos needed from enclosing ;; environments by code in this environment (closure nil :type list) ;; a list of NLX-Info structures describing all the non-local exits ;; into this environment (nlx-info nil :type list) ;; some kind of info used by the back end (info nil)) (defprinter (environment) function (closure :test closure) (nlx-info :test nlx-info)) ;;; The TAIL-SET structure is used to accumulate information about ;;; tail-recursive local calls. The "tail set" is effectively the ;;; transitive closure of the "is called tail-recursively by" ;;; relation. ;;; ;;; All functions in the same tail set share the same TAIL-SET ;;; structure. Initially each function has its own TAIL-SET, but when ;;; IR1-OPTIMIZE-RETURN notices a tail local call, it joins the tail ;;; sets of the called function and the calling function. ;;; ;;; The tail set is somewhat approximate, because it is too early to ;;; be sure which calls will be TR. Any call that *might* end up TR ;;; causes tail-set merging. (defstruct (tail-set (:copier nil)) ;; a list of all the lambdas in this tail set (functions nil :type list) ;; our current best guess of the type returned by these functions. ;; This is the union across all the functions of the return node's ;; RESULT-TYPE. excluding local calls. (type *wild-type* :type ctype) ;; some info used by the back end (info nil)) (defprinter (tail-set) functions type (info :test info)) ;;; The NLX-Info structure is used to collect various information ;;; about non-local exits. This is effectively an annotation on the ;;; CONTINUATION, although it is accessed by searching in the ;;; ENVIRONMENT-NLX-INFO. (def!struct (nlx-info (:make-load-form-fun ignore-it)) ;; the cleanup associated with this exit. In a catch or ;; unwind-protect, this is the :CATCH or :UNWIND-PROTECT cleanup, ;; and not the cleanup for the escape block. The CLEANUP-KIND of ;; this thus provides a good indication of what kind of exit is ;; being done. (cleanup (required-argument) :type cleanup) ;; the continuation exited to (the CONT of the EXIT nodes). If this ;; exit is from an escape function (CATCH or UNWIND-PROTECT), then ;; environment analysis deletes the escape function and instead has ;; the %NLX-ENTRY use this continuation. ;; ;; This slot is primarily an indication of where this exit delivers ;; its values to (if any), but it is also used as a sort of name to ;; allow us to find the NLX-Info that corresponds to a given exit. ;; For this purpose, the Entry must also be used to disambiguate, ;; since exits to different places may deliver their result to the ;; same continuation. (continuation (required-argument) :type continuation) ;; the entry stub inserted by environment analysis. This is a block ;; containing a call to the %NLX-Entry funny function that has the ;; original exit destination as its successor. Null only ;; temporarily. (target nil :type (or cblock null)) ;; some kind of info used by the back end info) (defprinter (nlx-info) continuation target info) ;;;; LEAF structures ;;; Variables, constants and functions are all represented by LEAF ;;; structures. A reference to a LEAF is indicated by a REF node. This ;;; allows us to easily substitute one for the other without actually ;;; hacking the flow graph. (def!struct (leaf (:make-load-form-fun ignore-it) (:constructor nil)) ;; some name for this leaf. The exact significance of the name ;; depends on what kind of leaf it is. In a LAMBDA-VAR or ;; GLOBAL-VAR, this is the symbol name of the variable. In a ;; functional that is from a DEFUN, this is the defined name. In ;; other functionals, this is a descriptive string. (name nil :type t) ;; the type which values of this leaf must have (type *universal-type* :type ctype) ;; where the TYPE information came from: ;; :DECLARED, from a declaration. ;; :ASSUMED, from uses of the object. ;; :DEFINED, from examination of the definition. ;; FIXME: This should be a named type. (LEAF-WHERE-FROM?) (where-from :assumed :type (member :declared :assumed :defined)) ;; list of the REF nodes for this leaf (refs () :type list) ;; true if there was ever a REF or SET node for this leaf. This may ;; be true when REFS and SETS are null, since code can be deleted. (ever-used nil :type boolean) ;; some kind of info used by the back end (info nil)) ;;; The CONSTANT structure is used to represent known constant values. ;;; If NAME is not null, then it is the name of the named constant ;;; which this leaf corresponds to, otherwise this is an anonymous ;;; constant. (def!struct (constant (:include leaf)) ;; the value of the constant (value nil :type t)) (defprinter (constant) (name :test name) value) ;;; The BASIC-VAR structure represents information common to all ;;; variables which don't correspond to known local functions. (def!struct (basic-var (:include leaf) (:constructor nil)) ;; Lists of the set nodes for this variable. (sets () :type list)) ;;; The GLOBAL-VAR structure represents a value hung off of the symbol ;;; NAME. We use a :CONSTANT VAR when we know that the thing is a ;;; constant, but don't know what the value is at compile time. (def!struct (global-var (:include basic-var)) ;; kind of variable described (kind (required-argument) :type (member :special :global-function :constant :global))) (defprinter (global-var) name (type :test (not (eq type *universal-type*))) (where-from :test (not (eq where-from :assumed))) kind) ;;; The SLOT-ACCESSOR structure represents slot accessor functions. It ;;; is a subtype of GLOBAL-VAR to make it look more like a normal ;;; function. (def!struct (slot-accessor (:include global-var (where-from :defined) (kind :global-function))) ;; The description of the structure that this is an accessor for. (for (required-argument) :type sb!xc:class) ;; The slot description of the slot. (slot (required-argument))) (defprinter (slot-accessor) name for slot) ;;; The DEFINED-FUNCTION structure represents functions that are ;;; defined in the same compilation block, or that have inline ;;; expansions, or have a non-NIL INLINEP value. Whenever we change ;;; the INLINEP state (i.e. an inline proclamation) we copy the ;;; structure so that former inlinep values are preserved. (def!struct (defined-function (:include global-var (where-from :defined) (kind :global-function))) ;; The values of INLINEP and INLINE-EXPANSION initialized from the ;; global environment. (inlinep nil :type inlinep) (inline-expansion nil :type (or cons null)) ;; The block-local definition of this function (either because it ;; was semi-inline, or because it was defined in this block.) If ;; this function is not an entry point, then this may be deleted or ;; let-converted. Null if we haven't converted the expansion yet. (functional nil :type (or functional null))) (defprinter (defined-function) name inlinep (functional :test functional)) ;;;; function stuff ;;; We default the WHERE-FROM and TYPE slots to :DEFINED and FUNCTION. ;;; We don't normally manipulate function types for defined functions, ;;; but if someone wants to know, an approximation is there. (def!struct (functional (:include leaf (where-from :defined) (type (specifier-type 'function)))) ;; Some information about how this function is used. These values are ;; meaningful: ;; ;; NIL ;; an ordinary function, callable using local call ;; ;; :LET ;; a lambda that is used in only one local call, and has in ;; effect been substituted directly inline. The return node is ;; deleted, and the result is computed with the actual result ;; continuation for the call. ;; ;; :MV-LET ;; Similar to :LET, but the call is an MV-CALL. ;; ;; :ASSIGNMENT ;; similar to a LET, but can have other than one call as long as ;; there is at most one non-tail call. ;; ;; :OPTIONAL ;; a lambda that is an entry-point for an optional-dispatch. ;; Similar to NIL, but requires greater caution, since local call ;; analysis may create new references to this function. Also, the ;; function cannot be deleted even if it has *no* references. The ;; Optional-Dispatch is in the LAMDBA-OPTIONAL-DISPATCH. ;; ;; :EXTERNAL ;; an external entry point lambda. The function it is an entry ;; for is in the Entry-Function. ;; ;; :TOP-LEVEL ;; a top-level lambda, holding a compiled top-level form. ;; Compiled very much like NIL, but provides an indication of ;; top-level context. A top-level lambda should have *no* ;; references. Its Entry-Function is a self-pointer. ;; ;; :TOP-LEVEL-XEP ;; After a component is compiled, we clobber any top-level code ;; references to its non-closure XEPs with dummy FUNCTIONAL ;; structures having this kind. This prevents the retained ;; top-level code from holding onto the IR for the code it ;; references. ;; ;; :ESCAPE ;; :CLEANUP ;; special functions used internally by CATCH and UNWIND-PROTECT. ;; These are pretty much like a normal function (NIL), but are ;; treated specially by local call analysis and stuff. Neither ;; kind should ever be given an XEP even though they appear as ;; args to funny functions. An :ESCAPE function is never actually ;; called, and thus doesn't need to have code generated for it. ;; ;; :DELETED ;; This function has been found to be uncallable, and has been ;; marked for deletion. (kind nil :type (member nil :optional :deleted :external :top-level :escape :cleanup :let :mv-let :assignment :top-level-xep)) ;; In a normal function, this is the external entry point (XEP) ;; lambda for this function, if any. Each function that is used ;; other than in a local call has an XEP, and all of the ;; non-local-call references are replaced with references to the ;; XEP. ;; ;; In an XEP lambda (indicated by the :External kind), this is the ;; function that the XEP is an entry-point for. The body contains ;; local calls to all the actual entry points in the function. In a ;; :Top-Level lambda (which is its own XEP) this is a self-pointer. ;; ;; With all other kinds, this is null. (entry-function nil :type (or functional null)) ;; the value of any inline/notinline declaration for a local function (inlinep nil :type inlinep) ;; If we have a lambda that can be used as in inline expansion for ;; this function, then this is it. If there is no source-level ;; lambda corresponding to this function then this is Null (but then ;; INLINEP will always be NIL as well.) (inline-expansion nil :type list) ;; the lexical environment that the inline-expansion should be converted in (lexenv *lexenv* :type lexenv) ;; the original function or macro lambda list, or :UNSPECIFIED if ;; this is a compiler created function (arg-documentation nil :type (or list (member :unspecified))) ;; various rare miscellaneous info that drives code generation & stuff (plist () :type list)) (defprinter (functional) name) ;;; The CLAMBDA only deals with required lexical arguments. Special, ;;; optional, keyword and rest arguments are handled by transforming ;;; into simpler stuff. (def!struct (clambda (:include functional) (:conc-name lambda-) (:predicate lambda-p) (:constructor make-lambda) (:copier copy-lambda)) ;; List of lambda-var descriptors for args. (vars nil :type list) ;; If this function was ever a :OPTIONAL function (an entry-point ;; for an optional-dispatch), then this is that optional-dispatch. ;; The optional dispatch will be :DELETED if this function is no ;; longer :OPTIONAL. (optional-dispatch nil :type (or optional-dispatch null)) ;; The Bind node for this Lambda. This node marks the beginning of ;; the lambda, and serves to explicitly represent the lambda binding ;; semantics within the flow graph representation. Null in deleted ;; functions, and also in LETs where we deleted the call & bind ;; (because there are no variables left), but have not yet actually ;; deleted the lambda yet. (bind nil :type (or bind null)) ;; The Return node for this Lambda, or NIL if it has been deleted. ;; This marks the end of the lambda, receiving the result of the ;; body. In a let, the return node is deleted, and the body delivers ;; the value to the actual continuation. The return may also be ;; deleted if it is unreachable. (return nil :type (or creturn null)) ;; If this is a let, then the Lambda whose Lets list we are in, ;; otherwise this is a self-pointer. (home nil :type (or clambda null)) ;; A list of all the all the lambdas that have been let-substituted ;; in this lambda. This is only non-null in lambdas that aren't ;; lets. (lets () :type list) ;; A list of all the Entry nodes in this function and its lets. Null ;; an a let. (entries () :type list) ;; A list of all the functions directly called from this function ;; (or one of its lets) using a non-let local call. May include ;; deleted functions because nobody bothers to clear them out. (calls () :type list) ;; The Tail-Set that this lambda is in. Null during creation and in ;; let lambdas. (tail-set nil :type (or tail-set null)) ;; The structure which represents the environment that this ;; Function's variables are allocated in. This is filled in by ;; environment analysis. In a let, this is EQ to our home's ;; environment. (environment nil :type (or environment null)) ;; In a LET, this is the NODE-LEXENV of the combination node. We ;; retain it so that if the let is deleted (due to a lack of vars), ;; we will still have caller's lexenv to figure out which cleanup is ;; in effect. (call-lexenv nil :type (or lexenv null))) (defprinter (clambda :conc-name lambda-) name (type :test (not (eq type *universal-type*))) (where-from :test (not (eq where-from :assumed))) (vars :prin1 (mapcar #'leaf-name vars))) ;;; The OPTIONAL-DISPATCH leaf is used to represent hairy lambdas. It ;;; is a FUNCTIONAL, like LAMBDA. Each legal number of arguments has a ;;; function which is called when that number of arguments is passed. ;;; The function is called with all the arguments actually passed. If ;;; additional arguments are legal, then the LEXPR style MORE-ENTRY ;;; handles them. The value returned by the function is the value ;;; which results from calling the OPTIONAL-DISPATCH. ;;; ;;; The theory is that each entry-point function calls the next entry ;;; point tail-recursively, passing all the arguments passed in and ;;; the default for the argument the entry point is for. The last ;;; entry point calls the real body of the function. In the presence ;;; of supplied-p args and other hair, things are more complicated. In ;;; general, there is a distinct internal function that takes the ;;; supplied-p args as parameters. The preceding entry point calls ;;; this function with NIL filled in for the supplied-p args, while ;;; the current entry point calls it with T in the supplied-p ;;; positions. ;;; ;;; Note that it is easy to turn a call with a known number of ;;; arguments into a direct call to the appropriate entry-point ;;; function, so functions that are compiled together can avoid doing ;;; the dispatch. (def!struct (optional-dispatch (:include functional)) ;; the original parsed argument list, for anyone who cares (arglist nil :type list) ;; true if &ALLOW-OTHER-KEYS was supplied (allowp nil :type boolean) ;; true if &KEY was specified (doesn't necessarily mean that there ;; are any keyword arguments...) (keyp nil :type boolean) ;; the number of required arguments. This is the smallest legal ;; number of arguments. (min-args 0 :type unsigned-byte) ;; the total number of required and optional arguments. Args at ;; positions >= to this are &REST, &KEY or illegal args. (max-args 0 :type unsigned-byte) ;; list of the LAMBDAs which are the entry points for non-rest, ;; non-key calls. The entry for MIN-ARGS is first, MIN-ARGS+1 ;; second, ... MAX-ARGS last. The last entry-point always calls the ;; main entry; in simple cases it may be the main entry. (entry-points nil :type list) ;; An entry point which takes MAX-ARGS fixed arguments followed by ;; an argument context pointer and an argument count. This entry ;; point deals with listifying rest args and parsing keywords. This ;; is null when extra arguments aren't legal. (more-entry nil :type (or clambda null)) ;; The main entry-point into the function, which takes all arguments ;; including keywords as fixed arguments. The format of the ;; arguments must be determined by examining the arglist. This may ;; be used by callers that supply at least Max-Args arguments and ;; know what they are doing. (main-entry nil :type (or clambda null))) (defprinter (optional-dispatch) name (type :test (not (eq type *universal-type*))) (where-from :test (not (eq where-from :assumed))) arglist allowp keyp min-args max-args (entry-points :test entry-points) (more-entry :test more-entry) main-entry) ;;; The ARG-INFO structure allows us to tack various information onto ;;; LAMBDA-VARs during IR1 conversion. If we use one of these things, ;;; then the var will have to be massaged a bit before it is simple ;;; and lexical. (def!struct arg-info ;; true if this arg is to be specially bound (specialp nil :type boolean) ;; the kind of argument being described. Required args only have arg ;; info structures if they are special. (kind (required-argument) :type (member :required :optional :keyword :rest :more-context :more-count)) ;; If true, this is the VAR for SUPPLIED-P variable of a keyword or ;; optional arg. This is true for keywords with non-constant ;; defaults even when there is no user-specified supplied-p var. (supplied-p nil :type (or lambda-var null)) ;; the default for a keyword or optional, represented as the ;; original Lisp code. This is set to NIL in keyword arguments that ;; are defaulted using the SUPPLIED-P arg. (default nil :type t) ;; the actual keyword for a keyword argument (keyword nil :type (or keyword null))) (defprinter (arg-info) (specialp :test specialp) kind (supplied-p :test supplied-p) (default :test default) (keyword :test keyword)) ;;; The LAMBDA-VAR structure represents a lexical lambda variable. ;;; This structure is also used during IR1 conversion to describe ;;; lambda arguments which may ultimately turn out not to be simple ;;; and lexical. ;;; ;;; LAMBDA-VARs with no REFs are considered to be deleted; environment ;;; analysis isn't done on these variables, so the back end must check ;;; for and ignore unreferenced variables. Note that a deleted ;;; lambda-var may have sets; in this case the back end is still ;;; responsible for propagating the Set-Value to the set's Cont. (def!struct (lambda-var (:include basic-var)) ;; true if this variable has been declared IGNORE (ignorep nil :type boolean) ;; the CLAMBDA that this var belongs to. This may be null when we are ;; building a lambda during IR1 conversion. (home nil :type (or null clambda)) ;; This is set by environment analysis if it chooses an indirect ;; (value cell) representation for this variable because it is both ;; set and closed over. (indirect nil :type boolean) ;; The following two slots are only meaningful during IR1 conversion ;; of hairy lambda vars: ;; ;; The ARG-INFO structure which holds information obtained from ;; &keyword parsing. (arg-info nil :type (or arg-info null)) ;; if true, the GLOBAL-VAR structure for the special variable which ;; is to be bound to the value of this argument (specvar nil :type (or global-var null)) ;; Set of the CONSTRAINTs on this variable. Used by constraint ;; propagation. This is left null by the lambda pre-pass if it ;; determine that this is a set closure variable, and is thus not a ;; good subject for flow analysis. (constraints nil :type (or sset null))) (defprinter (lambda-var) name (type :test (not (eq type *universal-type*))) (where-from :test (not (eq where-from :assumed))) (ignorep :test ignorep) (arg-info :test arg-info) (specvar :test specvar)) ;;;; basic node types ;;; A REF represents a reference to a LEAF. REF-REOPTIMIZE is ;;; initially (and forever) NIL, since REFs don't receive any values ;;; and don't have any IR1 optimizer. (defstruct (ref (:include node (:reoptimize nil)) (:constructor make-ref (derived-type leaf)) (:copier nil)) ;; The leaf referenced. (leaf nil :type leaf)) (defprinter (ref) leaf) ;;; Naturally, the IF node always appears at the end of a block. ;;; NODE-CONT is a dummy continuation, and is there only to keep ;;; people happy. (defstruct (cif (:include node) (:conc-name if-) (:predicate if-p) (:constructor make-if) (:copier copy-if)) ;; CONTINUATION for the predicate (test (required-argument) :type continuation) ;; the blocks that we execute next in true and false case, ;; respectively (may be the same) (consequent (required-argument) :type cblock) (alternative (required-argument) :type cblock)) (defprinter (cif :conc-name if-) (test :prin1 (continuation-use test)) consequent alternative) (defstruct (cset (:include node (derived-type *universal-type*)) (:conc-name set-) (:predicate set-p) (:constructor make-set) (:copier copy-set)) ;; descriptor for the variable set (var (required-argument) :type basic-var) ;; continuation for the value form (value (required-argument) :type continuation)) (defprinter (cset :conc-name set-) var (value :prin1 (continuation-use value))) ;;; The BASIC-COMBINATION structure is used to represent both normal ;;; and multiple value combinations. In a local function call, this ;;; node appears at the end of its block and the body of the called ;;; function appears as the successor. The NODE-CONT remains the ;;; continuation which receives the value of the call. (defstruct (basic-combination (:include node) (:constructor nil) (:copier nil)) ;; continuation for the function (fun (required-argument) :type continuation) ;; list of CONTINUATIONs for the args. In a local call, an argument ;; continuation may be replaced with NIL to indicate that the ;; corresponding variable is unreferenced, and thus no argument ;; value need be passed. (args nil :type list) ;; the kind of function call being made. :LOCAL means that this is a ;; local call to a function in the same component, and that argument ;; syntax checking has been done, etc. Calls to known global ;; functions are represented by storing the FUNCTION-INFO for the ;; function in this slot. :FULL is a call to an (as yet) unknown ;; function. :ERROR is like :FULL, but means that we have discovered ;; that the call contains an error, and should not be reconsidered ;; for optimization. (kind :full :type (or (member :local :full :error) function-info)) ;; some kind of information attached to this node by the back end (info nil)) ;;; The COMBINATION node represents all normal function calls, ;;; including FUNCALL. This is distinct from BASIC-COMBINATION so that ;;; an MV-COMBINATION isn't COMBINATION-P. (defstruct (combination (:include basic-combination) (:constructor make-combination (fun)) (:copier nil))) (defprinter (combination) (fun :prin1 (continuation-use fun)) (args :prin1 (mapcar (lambda (x) (if x (continuation-use x) "")) args))) ;;; An MV-COMBINATION is to MULTIPLE-VALUE-CALL as a COMBINATION is to ;;; FUNCALL. This is used to implement all the multiple-value ;;; receiving forms. (defstruct (mv-combination (:include basic-combination) (:constructor make-mv-combination (fun)) (:copier nil))) (defprinter (mv-combination) (fun :prin1 (continuation-use fun)) (args :prin1 (mapcar #'continuation-use args))) ;;; The BIND node marks the beginning of a lambda body and represents ;;; the creation and initialization of the variables. (defstruct (bind (:include node) (:copier nil)) ;; the lambda we are binding variables for. Null when we are ;; creating the LAMBDA during IR1 translation. (lambda nil :type (or clambda null))) (defprinter (bind) lambda) ;;; The RETURN node marks the end of a lambda body. It collects the ;;; return values and represents the control transfer on return. This ;;; is also where we stick information used for TAIL-SET type ;;; inference. (defstruct (creturn (:include node) (:conc-name return-) (:predicate return-p) (:constructor make-return) (:copier copy-return)) ;; the lambda we are returning from. Null temporarily during ;; ir1tran. (lambda nil :type (or clambda null)) ;; the continuation which yields the value of the lambda (result (required-argument) :type continuation) ;; the union of the node-derived-type of all uses of the result ;; other than by a local call, intersected with the result's ;; asserted-type. If there are no non-call uses, this is ;; *EMPTY-TYPE* (result-type *wild-type* :type ctype)) (defprinter (creturn :conc-name return-) lambda result-type) ;;;; non-local exit support ;;;; ;;;; In IR1, we insert special nodes to mark potentially non-local ;;;; lexical exits. ;;; The ENTRY node serves to mark the start of the dynamic extent of a ;;; lexical exit. It is the mess-up node for the corresponding :Entry ;;; cleanup. (defstruct (entry (:include node) (:copier nil)) ;; All of the Exit nodes for potential non-local exits to this point. (exits nil :type list) ;; The cleanup for this entry. NULL only temporarily. (cleanup nil :type (or cleanup null))) (defprinter (entry)) ;;; The EXIT node marks the place at which exit code would be emitted, ;;; if necessary. This is interposed between the uses of the exit ;;; continuation and the exit continuation's DEST. Instead of using ;;; the returned value being delivered directly to the exit ;;; continuation, it is delivered to our VALUE continuation. The ;;; original exit continuation is the exit node's CONT. (defstruct (exit (:include node) (:copier nil)) ;; The Entry node that this is an exit for. If null, this is a ;; degenerate exit. A degenerate exit is used to "fill" an empty ;; block (which isn't allowed in IR1.) In a degenerate exit, Value ;; is always also null. (entry nil :type (or entry null)) ;; The continuation yeilding the value we are to exit with. If NIL, ;; then no value is desired (as in GO). (value nil :type (or continuation null))) (defprinter (exit) (entry :test entry) (value :test value)) ;;;; miscellaneous IR1 structures (defstruct (undefined-warning #-no-ansi-print-object (:print-object (lambda (x s) (print-unreadable-object (x s :type t) (prin1 (undefined-warning-name x) s)))) (:copier nil)) ;; the name of the unknown thing (name nil :type (or symbol list)) ;; the kind of reference to NAME (kind (required-argument) :type (member :function :type :variable)) ;; the number of times this thing was used (count 0 :type unsigned-byte) ;; a list of COMPILER-ERROR-CONTEXT structures describing places ;; where this thing was used. Note that we only record the first ;; *UNDEFINED-WARNING-LIMIT* calls. (warnings () :type list)) ;;;; Freeze some structure types to speed type testing. #!-sb-fluid (declaim (freeze-type node leaf lexenv continuation cblock component cleanup environment tail-set nlx-info))