;;;
;;; We special-case NULL, since it does have a source tranform and is
;;; interesting to us.
-(defun function-cost (name)
+(defun fun-guessed-cost (name)
(declare (symbol name))
(let ((info (info :function :info name))
(call-cost (template-cost (template-or-lose 'call-named))))
(if info
- (let ((templates (function-info-templates info)))
+ (let ((templates (fun-info-templates info)))
(if templates
(template-cost (first templates))
(case name
(t call-cost))))
call-cost)))
-;;; Return some sort of guess for the cost of doing a test against TYPE.
-;;; The result need not be precise as long as it isn't way out in space. The
-;;; units are based on the costs specified for various templates in the VM
-;;; definition.
+;;; Return some sort of guess for the cost of doing a test against
+;;; TYPE. The result need not be precise as long as it isn't way out
+;;; in space. The units are based on the costs specified for various
+;;; templates in the VM definition.
(defun type-test-cost (type)
(declare (type ctype type))
(or (let ((check (type-check-template type)))
(let ((found (cdr (assoc type *backend-type-predicates*
:test #'type=))))
(if found
- (+ (function-cost found) (function-cost 'eq))
+ (+ (fun-guessed-cost found) (fun-guessed-cost 'eq))
nil))))
(typecase type
- (union-type
- (collect ((res 0 +))
- (dolist (mem (union-type-types type))
- (res (type-test-cost mem)))
- (res)))
+ (compound-type
+ (reduce #'+ (compound-type-types type) :key 'type-test-cost))
(member-type
(* (length (member-type-members type))
- (function-cost 'eq)))
+ (fun-guessed-cost 'eq)))
(numeric-type
(* (if (numeric-type-complexp type) 2 1)
- (function-cost
+ (fun-guessed-cost
(if (csubtypep type (specifier-type 'fixnum)) 'fixnump 'numberp))
(+ 1
(if (numeric-type-low type) 1 0)
(if (numeric-type-high type) 1 0))))
+ (cons-type
+ (+ (type-test-cost (specifier-type 'cons))
+ (fun-guessed-cost 'car)
+ (type-test-cost (cons-type-car-type type))
+ (fun-guessed-cost 'cdr)
+ (type-test-cost (cons-type-cdr-type type))))
(t
- (function-cost 'typep)))))
+ (fun-guessed-cost 'typep)))))
+
+(defun-cached
+ (weaken-type :hash-bits 8
+ :hash-function (lambda (x)
+ (logand (type-hash-value x) #xFF)))
+ ((type eq))
+ (declare (type ctype type))
+ (let ((min-cost (type-test-cost type))
+ (min-type type)
+ (found-super nil))
+ (dolist (x *backend-type-predicates*)
+ (let ((stype (car x)))
+ (when (and (csubtypep type stype)
+ (not (union-type-p stype)))
+ (let ((stype-cost (type-test-cost stype)))
+ (when (or (< stype-cost min-cost)
+ (type= stype type))
+ ;; If the supertype is equal in cost to the type, we
+ ;; prefer the supertype. This produces a closer
+ ;; approximation of the right thing in the presence of
+ ;; poor cost info.
+ (setq found-super t
+ min-type stype
+ min-cost stype-cost))))))
+ (if found-super
+ min-type
+ *universal-type*)))
+
+(defun weaken-values-type (type)
+ (declare (type ctype type))
+ (cond ((eq type *wild-type*) type)
+ ((not (values-type-p type))
+ (weaken-type type))
+ (t
+ (make-values-type :required (mapcar #'weaken-type
+ (values-type-required type))
+ :optional (mapcar #'weaken-type
+ (values-type-optional type))
+ :rest (acond ((values-type-rest type)
+ (weaken-type it)))))))
\f
;;;; checking strategy determination
-;;; Return the type we should test for when we really want to check for
-;;; Type. If speed, space or compilation speed is more important than safety,
-;;; then we return a weaker type if it is easier to check. First we try the
-;;; defined type weakenings, then look for any predicate that is cheaper.
-;;;
-;;; If the supertype is equal in cost to the type, we prefer the supertype.
-;;; This produces a closer approximation of the right thing in the presence of
-;;; poor cost info.
-(defun maybe-weaken-check (type cont)
- (declare (type ctype type) (type continuation cont))
- (cond ((policy (continuation-dest cont)
- (<= speed safety) (<= space safety) (<= cspeed safety))
- type)
- (t
- (let ((min-cost (type-test-cost type))
- (min-type type)
- (found-super nil))
- (dolist (x *backend-type-predicates*)
- (let ((stype (car x)))
- (when (and (csubtypep type stype)
- (not (union-type-p stype)))
- (let ((stype-cost (type-test-cost stype)))
- (when (or (< stype-cost min-cost)
- (type= stype type))
- (setq found-super t)
- (setq min-type stype min-cost stype-cost))))))
- (if found-super
- min-type
- *universal-type*)))))
+;;; Return the type we should test for when we really want to check
+;;; for TYPE. If type checking policy is "fast", then we return a
+;;; weaker type if it is easier to check. First we try the defined
+;;; type weakenings, then look for any predicate that is cheaper.
+(defun maybe-weaken-check (type policy)
+ (declare (type ctype type))
+ (ecase (policy policy type-check)
+ (0 *wild-type*)
+ (2 (weaken-values-type type))
+ (3 type)))
-;;; Like VALUES-TYPES, only mash any complex function types to FUNCTION.
-(defun no-function-values-types (type)
+;;; This is like VALUES-TYPES, only we mash any complex function types
+;;; to FUNCTION.
+(defun no-fun-values-types (type)
(declare (type ctype type))
(multiple-value-bind (res count) (values-types type)
- (values (mapcar #'(lambda (type)
- (if (function-type-p type)
- (specifier-type 'function)
- type))
+ (values (mapcar (lambda (type)
+ (if (fun-type-p type)
+ (specifier-type 'function)
+ type))
res)
count)))
;;; Switch to disable check complementing, for evaluation.
(defvar *complement-type-checks* t)
-;;; Cont is a continuation we are doing a type check on and Types is a list
-;;; of types that we are checking its values against. If we have proven
-;;; that Cont generates a fixed number of values, then for each value, we check
-;;; whether it is cheaper to then difference between the proven type and
-;;; the corresponding type in Types. If so, we opt for a :HAIRY check with
-;;; that test negated. Otherwise, we try to do a simple test, and if that is
-;;; impossible, we do a hairy test with non-negated types. If true,
-;;; Force-Hairy forces a hairy type check.
+;;; CONT is a continuation we are doing a type check on and TYPES is a
+;;; list of types that we are checking its values against. If we have
+;;; proven that CONT generates a fixed number of values, then for each
+;;; value, we check whether it is cheaper to then difference between
+;;; the proven type and the corresponding type in TYPES. If so, we opt
+;;; for a :HAIRY check with that test negated. Otherwise, we try to do
+;;; a simple test, and if that is impossible, we do a hairy test with
+;;; non-negated types. If true, FORCE-HAIRY forces a hairy type check.
;;;
-;;; When doing a non-negated check, we call MAYBE-WEAKEN-CHECK to weaken the
-;;; test to a convenient supertype (conditional on policy.) If debug-info is
-;;; not particularly important (debug <= 1) or speed is 3, then we allow
-;;; weakened checks to be simple, resulting in less informative error messages,
-;;; but saving space and possibly time.
-(defun maybe-negate-check (cont types force-hairy)
+;;; When doing a non-negated check, we call MAYBE-WEAKEN-CHECK to
+;;; weaken the test to a convenient supertype (conditional on policy.)
+;;; If SPEED is 3, or DEBUG-INFO is not particularly important (DEBUG
+;;; <= 1), then we allow weakened checks to be simple, resulting in
+;;; less informative error messages, but saving space and possibly
+;;; time.
+;;;
+;;; FIXME: I don't quite understand this, but it looks as though
+;;; that means type checks are weakened when SPEED=3 regardless of
+;;; the SAFETY level, which is not the right thing to do.
+(defun maybe-negate-check (cont types original-types force-hairy)
(declare (type continuation cont) (list types))
(multiple-value-bind (ptypes count)
- (no-function-values-types (continuation-proven-type cont))
+ (no-fun-values-types (continuation-derived-type cont))
(if (eq count :unknown)
- (if (and (every #'type-check-template types) (not force-hairy))
- (values :simple types)
- (values :hairy
- (mapcar #'(lambda (x)
- (list nil (maybe-weaken-check x cont) x))
- types)))
- (let ((res (mapcar #'(lambda (p c)
- (let ((diff (type-difference p c))
- (weak (maybe-weaken-check c cont)))
- (if (and diff
- (< (type-test-cost diff)
- (type-test-cost weak))
- *complement-type-checks*)
- (list t diff c)
- (list nil weak c))))
- ptypes types)))
- (cond ((or force-hairy (find-if #'first res))
- (values :hairy res))
- ((every #'type-check-template types)
- (values :simple types))
- ((policy (continuation-dest cont)
- (or (<= debug 1) (and (= speed 3) (/= debug 3))))
- (let ((weakened (mapcar #'second res)))
- (if (every #'type-check-template weakened)
- (values :simple weakened)
- (values :hairy res))))
- (t
- (values :hairy res)))))))
+ (if (and (every #'type-check-template types) (not force-hairy))
+ (values :simple types)
+ (values :hairy (mapcar (lambda (x) (list nil x x)) types)))
+ (let ((res (mapcar (lambda (p c a)
+ (let ((diff (type-difference p c)))
+ (if (and diff
+ (< (type-test-cost diff)
+ (type-test-cost c))
+ *complement-type-checks*)
+ (list t diff a)
+ (list nil c a))))
+ ptypes types original-types)))
+ (cond ((or force-hairy (find-if #'first res))
+ (values :hairy res))
+ ((every #'type-check-template types)
+ (values :simple types))
+ (t
+ (values :hairy res)))))))
-;;; Determines whether Cont's assertion is:
-;;; -- Checkable by the back end (:SIMPLE), or
-;;; -- Not checkable by the back end, but checkable via an explicit test in
-;;; type check conversion (:HAIRY), or
+;;; Determines whether CONT's assertion is:
+;;; -- checkable by the back end (:SIMPLE), or
+;;; -- not checkable by the back end, but checkable via an explicit
+;;; test in type check conversion (:HAIRY), or
;;; -- not reasonably checkable at all (:TOO-HAIRY).
;;;
-;;; A type is checkable if it either represents a fixed number of values (as
-;;; determined by VALUES-TYPES), or it is the assertion for an MV-Bind. A type
-;;; is simply checkable if all the type assertions have a TYPE-CHECK-TEMPLATE.
-;;; In this :SIMPLE case, the second value is a list of the type restrictions
-;;; specified for the leading positional values.
+;;; A type is checkable if it either represents a fixed number of
+;;; values (as determined by VALUES-TYPES), or it is the assertion for
+;;; an MV-BIND. A type is simply checkable if all the type assertions
+;;; have a TYPE-CHECK-TEMPLATE. In this :SIMPLE case, the second value
+;;; is a list of the type restrictions specified for the leading
+;;; positional values.
;;;
-;;; We force a check to be hairy even when there are fixed values if we are in
-;;; a context where we may be forced to use the unknown values convention
-;;; anyway. This is because IR2tran can't generate type checks for unknown
-;;; values continuations but people could still be depending on the check being
-;;; done. We only care about EXIT and RETURN (not MV-COMBINATION) since these
-;;; are the only contexts where the ultimate values receiver
+;;; We force a check to be hairy even when there are fixed values if
+;;; we are in a context where we may be forced to use the unknown
+;;; values convention anyway. This is because IR2tran can't generate
+;;; type checks for unknown values continuations but people could
+;;; still be depending on the check being done. We only care about
+;;; EXIT and RETURN (not MV-COMBINATION) since these are the only
+;;; contexts where the ultimate values receiver
;;;
-;;; In the :HAIRY case, the second value is a list of triples of the form:
-;;; (Not-P Type Original-Type)
+;;; In the :HAIRY case, the second value is a list of triples of
+;;; the form:
+;;; (NOT-P TYPE ORIGINAL-TYPE)
;;;
-;;; If true, the Not-P flag indicates a test that the corresponding value is
-;;; *not* of the specified Type. Original-Type is the type asserted on this
-;;; value in the continuation, for use in error messages. When Not-P is true,
-;;; this will be different from Type.
+;;; If true, the NOT-P flag indicates a test that the corresponding
+;;; value is *not* of the specified TYPE. ORIGINAL-TYPE is the type
+;;; asserted on this value in the continuation, for use in error
+;;; messages. When NOT-P is true, this will be different from TYPE.
;;;
-;;; This allows us to take what has been proven about Cont's type into
-;;; consideration. If it is cheaper to test for the difference between the
-;;; derived type and the asserted type, then we check for the negation of this
-;;; type instead.
-(defun continuation-check-types (cont)
- (declare (type continuation cont))
- (let ((type (continuation-asserted-type cont))
- (dest (continuation-dest cont)))
- (assert (not (eq type *wild-type*)))
- (multiple-value-bind (types count) (no-function-values-types type)
- (cond ((not (eq count :unknown))
- (if (or (exit-p dest)
- (and (return-p dest)
- (multiple-value-bind (ignore count)
- (values-types (return-result-type dest))
- (declare (ignore ignore))
- (eq count :unknown))))
- (maybe-negate-check cont types t)
- (maybe-negate-check cont types nil)))
- ((and (mv-combination-p dest)
- (eq (basic-combination-kind dest) :local))
- (assert (values-type-p type))
- (maybe-negate-check cont (args-type-optional type) nil))
- (t
- (values :too-hairy nil))))))
+;;; This allows us to take what has been proven about CONT's type into
+;;; consideration. If it is cheaper to test for the difference between
+;;; the derived type and the asserted type, then we check for the
+;;; negation of this type instead.
+(defun cast-check-types (cast force-hairy)
+ (declare (type cast cast))
+ (let* ((cont (node-cont cast))
+ (ctype (coerce-to-values (cast-type-to-check cast)))
+ (atype (coerce-to-values (cast-asserted-type cast)))
+ (value (cast-value cast))
+ (vtype (continuation-derived-type value))
+ (dest (continuation-dest cont)))
+ (aver (not (eq ctype *wild-type*)))
+ (multiple-value-bind (ctypes count) (no-fun-values-types ctype)
+ (multiple-value-bind (atypes acount) (no-fun-values-types atype)
+ (multiple-value-bind (vtypes vcount) (values-types vtype)
+ (declare (ignore vtypes))
+ (aver (eq count acount))
+ (cond ((not (eq count :unknown))
+ (if (or (exit-p dest)
+ (and (return-p dest)
+ (multiple-value-bind (ignore count)
+ (values-types (return-result-type dest))
+ (declare (ignore ignore))
+ (eq count :unknown))))
+ (maybe-negate-check value ctypes atypes t)
+ (maybe-negate-check value ctypes atypes force-hairy)))
+ ((and (continuation-single-value-p cont)
+ (or (not (args-type-rest ctype))
+ (eq (args-type-rest ctype) *universal-type*)))
+ (principal-continuation-single-valuify cont)
+ (let ((creq (car (args-type-required ctype))))
+ (multiple-value-setq (ctype atype)
+ (if creq
+ (values creq (car (args-type-required atype)))
+ (values (car (args-type-optional ctype))
+ (car (args-type-optional atype)))))
+ (maybe-negate-check value
+ (list ctype) (list atype)
+ force-hairy)))
+ ((and (mv-combination-p dest)
+ (eq (mv-combination-kind dest) :local))
+ (let* ((fun-ref (continuation-use (mv-combination-fun dest)))
+ (length (length (lambda-vars (ref-leaf fun-ref)))))
+ (maybe-negate-check value
+ ;; FIXME
+ (adjust-list (values-type-types ctype)
+ length
+ *universal-type*)
+ (adjust-list (values-type-types atype)
+ length
+ *universal-type*)
+ force-hairy)))
+ ((not (eq vcount :unknown))
+ (maybe-negate-check value
+ (values-type-start ctype vcount)
+ (values-type-start atype vcount)
+ t))
+ (t
+ (values :too-hairy nil))))))))
+
+;;; Do we want to do a type check?
+(defun worth-type-check-p (cast)
+ (declare (type cast cast))
+ (let* ((cont (node-cont cast))
+ (dest (continuation-dest cont)))
+ (not (or (not (cast-type-check cast))
+ (and (combination-p dest)
+ (let ((kind (combination-kind dest)))
+ (or (eq kind :full)
+ ;; The theory is that the type assertion is
+ ;; from a declaration in (or on) the callee,
+ ;; so the callee should be able to do the
+ ;; check. We want to let the callee do the
+ ;; check, because it is possible that by the
+ ;; time of call that declaration will be
+ ;; changed and we do not want to make people
+ ;; recompile all calls to a function when they
+ ;; were originally compiled with a bad
+ ;; declaration. (See also bug 35.)
+ (and (fun-info-p kind)
+ (null (fun-info-templates kind))
+ (not (fun-info-ir2-convert kind)))))
+ (and
+ (immediately-used-p cont cast)
+ (values-subtypep (continuation-externally-checkable-type cont)
+ (cast-type-to-check cast))))))))
-;;; Return true if Cont is a continuation whose type the back end is likely
-;;; to want to check. Since we don't know what template the back end is going
-;;; to choose to implement the continuation's DEST, we use a heuristic. We
-;;; always return T unless:
-;;; -- Nobody uses the value, or
-;;; -- Safety is totally unimportant, or
+;;; Return true if CONT is a continuation whose type the back end is
+;;; likely to want to check. Since we don't know what template the
+;;; back end is going to choose to implement the continuation's DEST,
+;;; we use a heuristic. We always return T unless:
+;;; -- nobody uses the value, or
+;;; -- safety is totally unimportant, or
;;; -- the continuation is an argument to an unknown function, or
-;;; -- the continuation is an argument to a known function that has no
-;;; IR2-Convert method or :fast-safe templates that are compatible with the
-;;; call's type.
-;;;
-;;; We must only return nil when it is *certain* that a check will not be done,
-;;; since if we pass up this chance to do the check, it will be too late. The
-;;; penalty for being too conservative is duplicated type checks.
-;;;
-;;; If there is a compile-time type error, then we always return true unless
-;;; the DEST is a full call. With a full call, the theory is that the type
-;;; error is probably from a declaration in (or on) the callee, so the callee
-;;; should be able to do the check. We want to let the callee do the check,
-;;; because it is possible that the error is really in the callee, not the
-;;; caller. We don't want to make people recompile all calls to a function
-;;; when they were originally compiled with a bad declaration (or an old type
-;;; assertion derived from a definition appearing after the call.)
-(defun probable-type-check-p (cont)
- (declare (type continuation cont))
- (let ((dest (continuation-dest cont)))
- (cond ((eq (continuation-type-check cont) :error)
- (if (and (combination-p dest) (eq (combination-kind dest) :error))
- nil
- t))
- ((or (not dest)
+;;; -- the continuation is an argument to a known function that has
+;;; no IR2-CONVERT method or :FAST-SAFE templates that are
+;;; compatible with the call's type.
+(defun probable-type-check-p (cast)
+ (declare (type cast cast))
+ (let* ((cont (node-cont cast))
+ (dest (continuation-dest cont)))
+ (cond ((not dest) nil)
+ (t t))
+ #+nil
+ (cond ((or (not dest)
(policy dest (zerop safety)))
nil)
((basic-combination-p dest)
(let ((kind (basic-combination-kind dest)))
(cond ((eq cont (basic-combination-fun dest)) t)
((eq kind :local) t)
- ((member kind '(:full :error)) nil)
- ((function-info-ir2-convert kind) t)
+ ((eq kind :full)
+ (and (combination-p dest)
+ (not (values-subtypep ; explicit THE
+ (continuation-externally-checkable-type cont)
+ (continuation-type-to-check cont)))))
+
+ ((eq kind :error) nil)
+ ;; :ERROR means that we have an invalid syntax of
+ ;; the call and the callee will detect it before
+ ;; thinking about types.
+
+ ((fun-info-ir2-convert kind) t)
(t
- (dolist (template (function-info-templates kind) nil)
- (when (eq (template-policy template) :fast-safe)
+ (dolist (template (fun-info-templates kind) nil)
+ (when (eq (template-ltn-policy template) :fast-safe)
(multiple-value-bind (val win)
- (valid-function-use dest (template-type template))
+ (valid-fun-use dest (template-type template))
(when (or val (not win)) (return t)))))))))
(t t))))
-;;; Return a form that we can convert to do a hairy type check of the
-;;; specified Types. Types is a list of the format returned by
-;;; Continuation-Check-Types in the :HAIRY case. In place of the actual
-;;; value(s) we are to check, we use 'DUMMY. This constant reference is later
-;;; replaced with the actual values continuation.
-;;;
-;;; Note that we don't attempt to check for required values being unsupplied.
-;;; Such checking is impossible to efficiently do at the source level because
-;;; our fixed-values conventions are optimized for the common MV-Bind case.
+;;; Return a lambda form that we can convert to do a hairy type check
+;;; of the specified TYPES. TYPES is a list of the format returned by
+;;; CONTINUATION-CHECK-TYPES in the :HAIRY case.
;;;
-;;; We can always use Multiple-Value-Bind, since the macro is clever about
-;;; binding a single variable.
+;;; Note that we don't attempt to check for required values being
+;;; unsupplied. Such checking is impossible to efficiently do at the
+;;; source level because our fixed-values conventions are optimized
+;;; for the common MV-BIND case.
(defun make-type-check-form (types)
(let ((temps (make-gensym-list (length types))))
- `(multiple-value-bind ,temps 'dummy
- ,@(mapcar #'(lambda (temp type)
- (let* ((spec
- (let ((*unparse-function-type-simplify* t))
- (type-specifier (second type))))
- (test (if (first type) `(not ,spec) spec)))
- `(unless (typep ,temp ',test)
- (%type-check-error
- ,temp
- ',(type-specifier (third type))))))
- temps
- types)
+ `(multiple-value-bind ,temps
+ 'dummy
+ ,@(mapcar (lambda (temp type)
+ (let* ((spec
+ (let ((*unparse-fun-type-simplify* t))
+ (type-specifier (second type))))
+ (test (if (first type) `(not ,spec) spec)))
+ `(unless (typep ,temp ',test)
+ (%type-check-error
+ ,temp
+ ',(type-specifier (third type))))))
+ temps
+ types)
(values ,@temps))))
-;;; Splice in explicit type check code immediately before the node which is
-;;; Cont's Dest. This code receives the value(s) that were being passed to
-;;; Cont, checks the type(s) of the value(s), then passes them on to Cont.
-(defun convert-type-check (cont types)
- (declare (type continuation cont) (type list types))
- (with-ir1-environment (continuation-dest cont)
-
- ;; Ensuring that CONT starts a block lets us freely manipulate its uses.
- (ensure-block-start cont)
-
- ;; Make a new continuation and move CONT's uses to it.
- (let* ((new-start (make-continuation))
- (dest (continuation-dest cont))
- (prev (node-prev dest)))
- (continuation-starts-block new-start)
- (substitute-continuation-uses new-start cont)
-
- ;; Setting TYPE-CHECK in CONT to :DELETED indicates that the check has
- ;; been done.
- (setf (continuation-%type-check cont) :deleted)
-
- ;; Make the DEST node start its block so that we can splice in the
- ;; type check code.
- (when (continuation-use prev)
- (node-ends-block (continuation-use prev)))
-
- (let* ((prev-block (continuation-block prev))
- (new-block (continuation-block new-start))
- (dummy (make-continuation)))
-
- ;; Splice in the new block before DEST, giving the new block all of
- ;; DEST's predecessors.
- (dolist (block (block-pred prev-block))
- (change-block-successor block prev-block new-block))
-
- ;; Convert the check form, using the new block start as START and a
- ;; dummy continuation as CONT.
- (ir1-convert new-start dummy (make-type-check-form types))
-
- ;; TO DO: Why should this be true? -- WHN 19990601
- (assert (eq (continuation-block dummy) new-block))
-
- ;; 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.
- ;; 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
-
- (let ((node (continuation-use dummy)))
- (setf (block-last new-block) node)
- ;; Change the use to a use of CONT. (We need to use the dummy
- ;; continuation to get the control transfer right, because we want to
- ;; go to PREV's block, not CONT's.)
- (delete-continuation-use node)
- (add-continuation-use node cont))
- ;; Link the new block to PREV's block.
- (link-blocks new-block prev-block))
-
- ;; MAKE-TYPE-CHECK-FORM generated a form which checked the type of
- ;; 'DUMMY, not a real form. At this point we convert to the real form by
- ;; finding 'DUMMY and overwriting it with the new continuation. (We can
- ;; find 'DUMMY because no LET conversion has been done yet.) The
- ;; [mv-]combination code from the mv-bind in the check form will be the
- ;; use of the new check continuation. We substitute for the first
- ;; argument of this node.
- (let* ((node (continuation-use cont))
- (args (basic-combination-args node))
- (victim (first args)))
- (assert (and (= (length args) 1)
- (eq (constant-value
- (ref-leaf
- (continuation-use victim)))
- 'dummy)))
- (substitute-continuation new-start victim)))
-
- ;; Invoking local call analysis converts this call to a LET.
- (local-call-analyze *current-component*))
-
- (values))
+;;; Splice in explicit type check code immediately before the node
+;;; which is CONT's DEST. This code receives the value(s) that were
+;;; being passed to CONT, checks the type(s) of the value(s), then
+;;; passes them on to CONT.
+(defun convert-type-check (cast types)
+ (declare (type cast cast) (type list types))
+ (let ((cont (cast-value cast))
+ (length (length types)))
+ (filter-continuation cont (make-type-check-form types))
+ (reoptimize-continuation (cast-value cast))
+ (setf (cast-type-to-check cast) *wild-type*)
+ (setf (cast-%type-check cast) nil)
+ (let* ((atype (cast-asserted-type cast))
+ (atype (cond ((not (values-type-p atype))
+ atype)
+ ((= length 1)
+ (single-value-type atype))
+ (t
+ (make-values-type :required
+ (values-type-start atype length)))))
+ (dtype (node-derived-type cast))
+ (dtype (make-values-type :required
+ (values-type-start dtype length))))
+ (setf (cast-asserted-type cast) atype)
+ (setf (node-derived-type cast) dtype)))
-;;; Emit a type warning for Node. If the value of node is being used for a
-;;; variable binding, we figure out which one for source context. If the value
-;;; is a constant, we print it specially. We ignore nodes whose type is NIL,
-;;; since they are supposed to never return.
-(defun do-type-warning (node)
- (declare (type node node))
- (let* ((*compiler-error-context* node)
- (cont (node-cont node))
- (atype-spec (type-specifier (continuation-asserted-type cont)))
- (dtype (node-derived-type node))
- (dest (continuation-dest cont))
- (what (when (and (combination-p dest)
- (eq (combination-kind dest) :local))
- (let ((lambda (combination-lambda dest))
- (pos (position-or-lose cont (combination-args dest))))
- (format nil "~:[A possible~;The~] binding of ~S"
- (and (continuation-use cont)
- (eq (functional-kind lambda) :let))
- (leaf-name (elt (lambda-vars lambda) pos)))))))
- (cond ((eq dtype *empty-type*))
- ((and (ref-p node) (constant-p (ref-leaf node)))
- (compiler-warning "~:[This~;~:*~A~] is not a ~<~%~9T~:;~S:~>~% ~S"
- what atype-spec (constant-value (ref-leaf node))))
- (t
- (compiler-warning
- "~:[Result~;~:*~A~] is a ~S, ~<~%~9T~:;not a ~S.~>"
- what (type-specifier dtype) atype-spec))))
(values))
-;;; Mark Cont as being a continuation with a manifest type error. We set
-;;; the kind to :ERROR, and clear any FUNCTION-INFO if the continuation is an
-;;; argument to a known call. The last is done so that the back end doesn't
-;;; have to worry about type errors in arguments to known functions. This
-;;; clearing is inhibited for things with IR2-CONVERT methods, since we can't
-;;; do a full call to funny functions.
-(defun mark-error-continuation (cont)
- (declare (type continuation cont))
- (setf (continuation-%type-check cont) :error)
- (let ((dest (continuation-dest cont)))
- (when (and (combination-p dest)
- (let ((kind (basic-combination-kind dest)))
- (or (eq kind :full)
- (and (function-info-p kind)
- (not (function-info-ir2-convert kind))))))
- (setf (basic-combination-kind dest) :error)))
+;;; Check all possible arguments of CAST and emit type warnings for
+;;; those with type errors. If the value of USE is being used for a
+;;; variable binding, we figure out which one for source context. If
+;;; the value is a constant, we print it specially.
+(defun cast-check-uses (cast)
+ (declare (type cast cast))
+ (let* ((cont (node-cont cast))
+ (dest (continuation-dest cont))
+ (value (cast-value cast))
+ (atype (cast-asserted-type cast)))
+ (do-uses (use value)
+ (let ((dtype (node-derived-type use)))
+ (unless (values-types-equal-or-intersect dtype atype)
+ (let* ((*compiler-error-context* use)
+ (atype-spec (type-specifier atype))
+ (what (when (and (combination-p dest)
+ (eq (combination-kind dest) :local))
+ (let ((lambda (combination-lambda dest))
+ (pos (position-or-lose
+ cont (combination-args dest))))
+ (format nil "~:[A possible~;The~] binding of ~S"
+ (and (continuation-use cont)
+ (eq (functional-kind lambda) :let))
+ (leaf-source-name (elt (lambda-vars lambda)
+ pos)))))))
+ (cond ((and (ref-p use) (constant-p (ref-leaf use)))
+ (compiler-warn "~:[This~;~:*~A~] is not a ~<~%~9T~:;~S:~>~% ~S"
+ what atype-spec (constant-value (ref-leaf use))))
+ (t
+ (compiler-warn
+ "~:[Result~;~:*~A~] is a ~S, ~<~%~9T~:;not a ~S.~>"
+ what (type-specifier dtype) atype-spec))))))))
(values))
-;;; Loop over all blocks in Component that have TYPE-CHECK set, looking for
-;;; continuations with TYPE-CHECK T. We do two mostly unrelated things: detect
-;;; compile-time type errors and determine if and how to do run-time type
-;;; checks.
+;;; Loop over all blocks in COMPONENT that have TYPE-CHECK set,
+;;; looking for continuations with TYPE-CHECK T. We do two mostly
+;;; unrelated things: detect compile-time type errors and determine if
+;;; and how to do run-time type checks.
;;;
-;;; If there is a compile-time type error, then we mark the continuation and
-;;; emit a warning if appropriate. This part loops over all the uses of the
-;;; continuation, since after we convert the check, the :DELETED kind will
-;;; inhibit warnings about the types of other uses.
+;;; If there is a compile-time type error, then we mark the
+;;; continuation and emit a warning if appropriate. This part loops
+;;; over all the uses of the continuation, since after we convert the
+;;; check, the :DELETED kind will inhibit warnings about the types of
+;;; other uses.
;;;
-;;; If a continuation is too complex to be checked by the back end, or is
-;;; better checked with explicit code, then convert to an explicit test.
-;;; Assertions that can checked by the back end are passed through. Assertions
-;;; that can't be tested are flamed about and marked as not needing to be
-;;; checked.
+;;; If a continuation is too complex to be checked by the back end, or
+;;; is better checked with explicit code, then convert to an explicit
+;;; test. Assertions that can checked by the back end are passed
+;;; through. Assertions that can't be tested are flamed about and
+;;; marked as not needing to be checked.
;;;
-;;; If we determine that a type check won't be done, then we set TYPE-CHECK
-;;; to :NO-CHECK. In the non-hairy cases, this is just to prevent us from
-;;; wasting time coming to the same conclusion again on a later iteration. In
-;;; the hairy case, we must indicate to LTN that it must choose a safe
-;;; implementation, since IR2 conversion will choke on the check.
+;;; If we determine that a type check won't be done, then we set
+;;; TYPE-CHECK to :NO-CHECK. In the non-hairy cases, this is just to
+;;; prevent us from wasting time coming to the same conclusion again
+;;; on a later iteration. In the hairy case, we must indicate to LTN
+;;; that it must choose a safe implementation, since IR2 conversion
+;;; will choke on the check.
;;;
;;; The generation of the type checks is delayed until all the type
;;; check decisions have been made because the generation of the type
;;; which may lead to inappropriate template choices due to the
;;; modification of argument types.
(defun generate-type-checks (component)
- (collect ((conts))
+ (collect ((casts))
(do-blocks (block component)
(when (block-type-check block)
(do-nodes (node cont block)
- (let ((type-check (continuation-type-check cont)))
- (unless (member type-check '(nil :error :deleted))
- (let ((atype (continuation-asserted-type cont)))
- (do-uses (use cont)
- (unless (values-types-intersect (node-derived-type use)
- atype)
- (mark-error-continuation cont)
- (unless (policy node (= brevity 3))
- (do-type-warning use))))))
- (when (and (eq type-check t)
- (not *byte-compiling*))
- (cond ((probable-type-check-p cont)
- (conts cont))
- (t
- (setf (continuation-%type-check cont) :no-check))))))
+ (when (cast-p node)
+ (when (cast-type-check node)
+ (cast-check-uses node))
+ (cond ((worth-type-check-p node)
+ (casts (cons node (not (probable-type-check-p node)))))
+ (t
+ (setf (cast-%type-check node) nil)
+ (setf (cast-type-to-check node) *wild-type*)))))
(setf (block-type-check block) nil)))
- (dolist (cont (conts))
- (multiple-value-bind (check types) (continuation-check-types cont)
- (ecase check
- (:simple)
- (:hairy
- (convert-type-check cont types))
- (:too-hairy
- (let* ((context (continuation-dest cont))
- (*compiler-error-context* context))
- (when (policy context (>= safety brevity))
- (compiler-note
- "type assertion too complex to check:~% ~S."
- (type-specifier (continuation-asserted-type cont)))))
- (setf (continuation-%type-check cont) :deleted))))))
+ (dolist (cast (casts))
+ (destructuring-bind (cast . force-hairy) cast
+ (multiple-value-bind (check types)
+ (cast-check-types cast force-hairy)
+ (ecase check
+ (:simple)
+ (:hairy
+ (convert-type-check cast types))
+ (:too-hairy
+ (let ((*compiler-error-context* cast))
+ (when (policy cast (>= safety inhibit-warnings))
+ (compiler-notify
+ "type assertion too complex to check:~% ~S."
+ (type-specifier (coerce-to-values (cast-asserted-type cast))))))
+ (setf (cast-type-to-check cast) *wild-type*)
+ (setf (cast-%type-check cast) nil)))))))
(values))