;;;; files for more information.
(in-package "SB!C")
-
-(file-comment
- "$Header$")
\f
;;;; 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.
+;;; 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)
(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.
+;;; 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 node
+ (with-ir1-environment-from-node node
(let* ((start (make-continuation))
(block (continuation-starts-block start))
(cont (make-continuation))
(:unused nil)
(:deleted nil)))
-;;; Update continuation use information so that Node is no longer a
-;;; use of its Cont. If the old continuation doesn't start its block,
-;;; then we don't update the Block-Start-Uses, since it will be
+;;; Update continuation use information so that NODE is no longer a
+;;; use of its CONT. If the old continuation doesn't start its block,
+;;; then we don't update the BLOCK-START-USES, since it will be
;;; deleted when we are done.
;;;
;;; Note: if you call this function, you may have to do a
(setf (node-cont node) nil))
(values))
-;;; Update continuation use information so that Node uses Cont. If
-;;; Cont is :Unused, then we set its block to Node's Node-Block (which
+;;; Update continuation use information so that NODE uses CONT. If
+;;; CONT is :UNUSED, then we set its block to NODE's NODE-BLOCK (which
;;; must be set.)
;;;
;;; Note: if you call this function, you may have to do a
;;; has changed.
(declaim (ftype (function (node continuation) (values)) add-continuation-use))
(defun add-continuation-use (node cont)
- (assert (not (node-cont node)))
+ (aver (not (node-cont node)))
(let ((block (continuation-block cont)))
(ecase (continuation-kind cont)
(:deleted)
(:unused
- (assert (not block))
+ (aver (not block))
(let ((block (node-block node)))
- (assert block)
+ (aver block)
(setf (continuation-block cont) block))
(setf (continuation-kind cont) :inside-block)
(setf (continuation-use cont) node))
(setf (node-cont node) cont)
(values))
-;;; Return true if Cont is the Node-Cont for Node and Cont is transferred to
-;;; immediately after the evaluation of Node.
+;;; Return true if CONT is the NODE-CONT for NODE and CONT is
+;;; transferred to immediately after the evaluation of NODE.
(defun immediately-used-p (cont node)
(declare (type continuation cont) (type node node))
(and (eq (node-cont node) cont)
\f
;;;; continuation substitution
-;;; In Old's Dest, replace Old with New. New's Dest must initially be NIL.
-;;; When we are done, we call Flush-Dest on Old to clear its Dest and to note
-;;; potential optimization opportunities.
+;;; In OLD's DEST, replace OLD with NEW. NEW's DEST must initially be
+;;; NIL. When we are done, we call FLUSH-DEST on OLD to clear its DEST
+;;; and to note potential optimization opportunities.
(defun substitute-continuation (new old)
(declare (type continuation old new))
- (assert (not (continuation-dest new)))
+ (aver (not (continuation-dest new)))
(let ((dest (continuation-dest old)))
(etypecase dest
((or ref bind))
(setf (continuation-dest new) dest))
(values))
-;;; Replace all uses of Old with uses of New, where New has an arbitary
-;;; number of uses. If New will end up with more than one use, then we must
-;;; arrange for it to start a block if it doesn't already.
+;;; Replace all uses of OLD with uses of NEW, where NEW has an
+;;; arbitary number of uses. If NEW will end up with more than one
+;;; use, then we must arrange for it to start a block if it doesn't
+;;; already.
(defun substitute-continuation-uses (new old)
(declare (type continuation old new))
(unless (and (eq (continuation-kind new) :unused)
(do-uses (node old)
(delete-continuation-use node)
(add-continuation-use node new))
+ (dolist (lexenv-use (continuation-lexenv-uses old))
+ (setf (cadr lexenv-use) new))
(reoptimize-continuation new)
(values))
\f
;;;; block starting/creation
-;;; Return the block that Continuation is the start of, making a block if
-;;; necessary. This function is called by IR1 translators which may cause a
-;;; continuation to be used more than once. Every continuation which may be
-;;; used more than once must start a block by the time that anyone does a
-;;; Use-Continuation on it.
+;;; Return the block that CONT is the start of, making a block if
+;;; necessary. This function is called by IR1 translators which may
+;;; cause a continuation to be used more than once. Every continuation
+;;; which may be used more than once must start a block by the time
+;;; that anyone does a USE-CONTINUATION 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.
+;;; *CURRENT-COMPONENT* so that we keep track of which blocks we have
+;;; made.
(defun continuation-starts-block (cont)
(declare (type continuation cont))
(ecase (continuation-kind cont)
(:unused
- (assert (not (continuation-block cont)))
+ (aver (not (continuation-block cont)))
(let* ((head (component-head *current-component*))
(next (block-next head))
(new-block (make-block cont)))
(:block-start
(continuation-block cont))))
-;;; Ensure that Cont is the start of a block (or deleted) so that the use
-;;; set can be freely manipulated.
-;;; -- If the continuation is :Unused or is :Inside-Block and the Cont of Last
-;;; in its block, then we make it the start of a new deleted block.
-;;; -- If the continuation is :Inside-Block inside a block, then we split the
-;;; block using Node-Ends-Block, which makes the continuation be a
-;;; :Block-Start.
+;;; Ensure that CONT is the start of a block (or deleted) so that
+;;; the use set can be freely manipulated.
+;;; -- If the continuation is :UNUSED or is :INSIDE-BLOCK and the
+;;; CONT of LAST in its block, then we make it the start of a new
+;;; deleted block.
+;;; -- If the continuation is :INSIDE-BLOCK inside a block, then we
+;;; split the block using Node-Ends-Block, which makes the
+;;; continuation be a :BLOCK-START.
(defun ensure-block-start (cont)
(declare (type continuation cont))
(let ((kind (continuation-kind cont)))
\f
;;;; miscellaneous shorthand functions
-;;; Return the home (i.e. enclosing non-let) lambda for Node. Since the
-;;; LEXENV-LAMBDA may be deleted, we must chain up the LAMBDA-CALL-LEXENV
-;;; thread until we find a lambda that isn't deleted, and then return its home.
-(declaim (maybe-inline node-home-lambda))
+;;; 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))
(when (eq (lambda-home fun) fun)
(return fun))))
-#!-sb-fluid (declaim (inline node-block node-tlf-number))
-(declaim (maybe-inline node-environment))
(defun node-block (node)
(declare (type node node))
(the cblock (continuation-block (node-prev node))))
-(defun node-environment (node)
+(defun node-component (node)
+ (declare (type node node))
+ (block-component (node-block node)))
+(defun node-physenv (node)
(declare (type node node))
- #!-sb-fluid (declare (inline node-home-lambda))
- (the environment (lambda-environment (node-home-lambda node))))
+ (the physenv (lambda-physenv (node-home-lambda node))))
+
+(defun lambda-block (clambda)
+ (declare (type clambda clambda))
+ (node-block (lambda-bind clambda)))
+(defun lambda-component (clambda)
+ (block-component (lambda-block clambda)))
-;;; Return the enclosing cleanup for environment of the first or last node
-;;; in Block.
+;;; Return the enclosing cleanup for environment of the first or last
+;;; node in BLOCK.
(defun block-start-cleanup (block)
(declare (type cblock block))
(node-enclosing-cleanup (continuation-next (block-start block))))
(declare (type cblock block))
(node-enclosing-cleanup (block-last block)))
-;;; Return the non-let lambda that holds Block's code.
-(defun block-home-lambda (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.
+(defun block-home-lambda-or-null (block)
(declare (type cblock block))
- #!-sb-fluid (declare (inline node-home-lambda))
- (node-home-lambda (block-last 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.
+(defun block-home-lambda (block)
+ (the clambda
+ (block-home-lambda-or-null block)))
-;;; Return the IR1 environment for Block.
-(defun block-environment (block)
+;;; Return the IR1 physical environment for BLOCK.
+(defun block-physenv (block)
(declare (type cblock block))
- #!-sb-fluid (declare (inline node-home-lambda))
- (lambda-environment (node-home-lambda (block-last block))))
+ (lambda-physenv (block-home-lambda block)))
-;;; Return the Top Level Form number of path, i.e. the ordinal number of
-;;; its orignal source's top-level form in its compilation unit.
+;;; 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 orignal source (with the
-;;; TLF number last.)
+;;; 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 orignal 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.
+;;; 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.
+;;; 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.
+;;; Return the innermost source form for NODE.
(defun node-source-form (node)
(declare (type node node))
(let* ((path (node-source-path node))
(first forms)
(values (find-original-source path)))))
-;;; Return NODE-SOURCE-FORM, T if continuation has a single use, otherwise
-;;; NIL, NIL.
+;;; Return NODE-SOURCE-FORM, T if continuation has a single use,
+;;; otherwise NIL, NIL.
(defun continuation-source (cont)
(let ((use (continuation-use cont)))
(if use
(values (node-source-form use) t)
(values nil nil))))
+
+;;; Return the LAMBDA that is CONT's home, or NIL if there is none.
+(defun continuation-home-lambda-or-null (cont)
+ ;; 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 CONTINUATION-USE usually work; then if that
+ ;; fails, BLOCK-HOME-LAMBDA of CONTINUATION-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 ((continuation-use cont)
+ (node-home-lambda (continuation-use cont)))
+ ((continuation-block cont)
+ (block-home-lambda-or-null (continuation-block cont)))
+ (t
+ (error "internal error: confused about home lambda for ~S"))))
+
+;;; Return the LAMBDA that is CONT's home.
+(defun continuation-home-lambda (cont)
+ (the clambda
+ (continuation-home-lambda-or-null cont)))
\f
-;;; Return a new LEXENV just like Default except for the specified slot
-;;; values. Values for the alist slots are NCONC'ed to the beginning of the
-;;; current value, rather than replacing it entirely.
+;;; 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*)
functions variables blocks tags type-restrictions
options
(lambda (lexenv-lambda default))
(cleanup (lexenv-cleanup default))
- (cookie (lexenv-cookie default))
- (interface-cookie (lexenv-interface-cookie default)))
+ (policy (lexenv-policy default)))
(macrolet ((frob (var slot)
`(let ((old (,slot default)))
(if ,var
(frob blocks lexenv-blocks)
(frob tags lexenv-tags)
(frob type-restrictions lexenv-type-restrictions)
- lambda cleanup cookie interface-cookie
+ lambda cleanup policy
(frob options lexenv-options))))
-
-;;; Return a cookie that defaults any unsupplied optimize qualities in the
-;;; Interface-Cookie with the corresponding ones from the Cookie.
-(defun make-interface-cookie (lexenv)
- (declare (type lexenv lexenv))
- (let ((icookie (lexenv-interface-cookie lexenv))
- (cookie (lexenv-cookie lexenv)))
- (make-cookie
- :speed (or (cookie-speed icookie) (cookie-speed cookie))
- :space (or (cookie-space icookie) (cookie-space cookie))
- :safety (or (cookie-safety icookie) (cookie-safety cookie))
- :cspeed (or (cookie-cspeed icookie) (cookie-cspeed cookie))
- :brevity (or (cookie-brevity icookie) (cookie-brevity cookie))
- :debug (or (cookie-debug icookie) (cookie-debug cookie)))))
\f
;;;; flow/DFO/component hackery
-;;; Join Block1 and Block2.
-#!-sb-fluid (declaim (inline link-blocks))
+;;; Join BLOCK1 and BLOCK2.
(defun link-blocks (block1 block2)
(declare (type cblock block1 block2))
(setf (block-succ block1)
(defun %link-blocks (block1 block2)
(declare (type cblock block1 block2) (inline member))
(let ((succ1 (block-succ block1)))
- (assert (not (member block2 succ1 :test #'eq)))
+ (aver (not (member block2 succ1 :test #'eq)))
(cons block2 succ1)))
-;;; 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.
+;;; 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)))
(prev succ1 succ))
((eq (car succ) block2)
(setf (cdr prev) (cdr succ)))
- (assert succ))))
+ (aver succ))))
(let ((new-pred (delq block1 (block-pred block2))))
(setf (block-pred block2) new-pred)
(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.
+;;; 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) (inline member))
(unlink-blocks block old)
(values))
;;; Unlink a block from the next/prev chain. We also null out the
-;;; Component.
+;;; COMPONENT.
(declaim (ftype (function (cblock) (values)) remove-from-dfo))
-#!-sb-fluid (declaim (inline remove-from-dfo))
(defun remove-from-dfo (block)
(let ((next (block-next block))
(prev (block-prev block)))
(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.
-#!-sb-fluid (declaim (inline add-to-dfo))
+;;; 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)))
- (assert (not (eq (component-kind comp) :deleted)))
+ (aver (not (eq (component-kind comp) :deleted)))
(setf (block-component block) comp)
(setf (block-next after) block)
(setf (block-prev block) after)
(setf (block-prev next) block))
(values))
-;;; Set the Flag for all the blocks in Component to NIL, except for the head
-;;; and tail which are set to T.
+;;; Set the FLAG for all the blocks in COMPONENT to NIL, except for
+;;; the head and tail which are set to T.
(declaim (ftype (function (component) (values)) clear-flags))
(defun clear-flags (component)
(let ((head (component-head component))
(setf (block-flag block) nil)))
(values))
-;;; Make a component with no blocks in it. The Block-Flag is initially
+;;; Make a component with no blocks in it. The BLOCK-FLAG is initially
;;; true in the head and tail blocks.
(declaim (ftype (function nil component) make-empty-component))
(defun make-empty-component ()
(setf (block-prev tail) head)
res))
-;;; Makes 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.
+;;; 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))
(last (block-last block))
(last-cont (node-cont last)))
(unless (eq last node)
- (assert (and (eq (continuation-kind start) :inside-block)
+ (aver (and (eq (continuation-kind start) :inside-block)
(not (block-delete-p block))))
(let* ((succ (block-succ block))
(new-block
\f
;;;; deleting stuff
-;;; Deal with deleting the last (read) reference to a lambda-var. We
-;;; 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 the last variable.
+;;; Deal with deleting the last (read) reference to a LAMBDA-VAR. We
+;;; 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 the last variable.
;;;
-;;; 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.
+;;; 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.
(defun delete-lambda-var (leaf)
(declare (type lambda-var leaf))
(let* ((fun (lambda-var-home leaf))
(values))
-;;; Note that something interesting has happened to Var. We only deal with
-;;; LET variables, marking the corresponding initial value arg as needing to be
-;;; reoptimized.
+;;; Note that something interesting has happened to VAR. We only deal
+;;; with LET variables, marking the corresponding initial value arg as
+;;; needing to be reoptimized.
(defun reoptimize-lambda-var (var)
(declare (type lambda-var var))
(let ((fun (lambda-var-home var)))
(reoptimize-continuation (car args))))))
(values))
-;;; This function deletes functions that have no references. This need only
-;;; be called on functions that never had any references, since otherwise
+;;; 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)
- (assert (and (null (leaf-refs fun))
- (not (functional-entry-function 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 lambda. Since there is only
-;;; one way into a lambda, deleting the last reference to a lambda ensures that
-;;; there is no way to reach any of the code in it. So we just set the
-;;; Functional-Kind for Fun and its Lets to :Deleted, causing IR1 optimization
-;;; to delete blocks in that lambda.
+;;; Deal with deleting the last reference to a LAMBDA. Since there is
+;;; only one way into a LAMBDA, deleting the last reference to a
+;;; LAMBDA ensures that there is no way to reach any of the code in
+;;; it. So we just set the FUNCTIONAL-KIND for FUN and its LETs to
+;;; :DELETED, causing IR1 optimization to delete blocks in that
+;;; lambda.
;;;
-;;; 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.
+;;; 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.
;;;
-;;; If the lambda is an XEP, then we null out the Entry-Function in its
-;;; Entry-Function so that people will know that it is not an entry point
+;;; 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.
(defun delete-lambda (leaf)
(declare (type clambda leaf))
(let ((kind (functional-kind leaf))
(bind (lambda-bind leaf)))
- (assert (not (member kind '(:deleted :optional :top-level))))
+ (aver (not (member kind '(:deleted :optional :toplevel))))
+ (aver (not (functional-has-external-references-p leaf)))
(setf (functional-kind leaf) :deleted)
(setf (lambda-bind leaf) nil)
(dolist (let (lambda-lets leaf))
(let* ((bind-block (node-block bind))
(component (block-component bind-block))
(return (lambda-return leaf)))
- (assert (null (leaf-refs leaf)))
+ (aver (null (leaf-refs leaf)))
(unless (leaf-ever-used leaf)
(let ((*compiler-error-context* bind))
(compiler-note "deleting unused function~:[.~;~:*~% ~S~]"
- (leaf-name leaf))))
+ (leaf-debug-name leaf))))
(unlink-blocks (component-head component) bind-block)
(when return
(unlink-blocks (node-block return) (component-tail component)))
(setf (component-reanalyze component) t)
(let ((tails (lambda-tail-set leaf)))
- (setf (tail-set-functions tails)
- (delete leaf (tail-set-functions tails)))
+ (setf (tail-set-funs tails)
+ (delete leaf (tail-set-funs tails)))
(setf (lambda-tail-set leaf) nil))
(setf (component-lambdas component)
(delete leaf (component-lambdas component)))))
(when (eq kind :external)
- (let ((fun (functional-entry-function leaf)))
- (setf (functional-entry-function fun) nil)
+ (let ((fun (functional-entry-fun leaf)))
+ (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.
+;;; 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 deference was deleted (due
-;;; to their :OPTIONAL kind.)
+;;; 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
+;;; deference was deleted (due to their :OPTIONAL kind.)
;;;
-;;; Note that the last optional ep 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 let.
+;;; Note that the last optional ep 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 let.
(defun delete-optional-dispatch (leaf)
(declare (type optional-dispatch leaf))
- (let ((entry (functional-entry-function leaf)))
+ (let ((entry (functional-entry-fun leaf)))
(unless (and entry (leaf-refs entry))
- (assert (or (not entry) (eq (functional-kind entry) :deleted)))
+ (aver (or (not entry) (eq (functional-kind entry) :deleted)))
(setf (functional-kind leaf) :deleted)
(flet ((frob (fun)
(unless (eq (functional-kind fun) :deleted)
- (assert (eq (functional-kind fun) :optional))
+ (aver (eq (functional-kind fun) :optional))
(setf (functional-kind fun) nil)
(let ((refs (leaf-refs fun)))
(cond ((null refs)
(values))
-;;; 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.
+;;; 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))
(cond ((null refs)
(typecase leaf
- (lambda-var (delete-lambda-var leaf))
+ (lambda-var
+ (delete-lambda-var leaf))
(clambda
(ecase (functional-kind leaf)
((nil :let :mv-let :assignment :escape :cleanup)
- (assert (not (functional-entry-function leaf)))
+ (aver (not (functional-entry-fun leaf)))
(delete-lambda leaf))
(:external
(delete-lambda leaf))
(values))
-;;; This function is called by people who delete nodes; it provides a way to
-;;; indicate that the value of a continuation is no longer used. We null out
-;;; the Continuation-Dest, set Flush-P in the blocks containing uses of Cont
-;;; and set Component-Reoptimize. If the Prev of the use is deleted, then we
-;;; blow off reoptimization.
+;;; This function is called by people who delete nodes; it provides a
+;;; way to indicate that the value of a continuation is no longer
+;;; used. We null out the CONTINUATION-DEST, set FLUSH-P in the blocks
+;;; containing uses of CONT and set COMPONENT-REOPTIMIZE. If the PREV
+;;; of the use is deleted, then we blow off reoptimization.
;;;
-;;; If the continuation is :Deleted, then we don't do anything, since all
-;;; semantics have already been flushed. :Deleted-Block-Start start
-;;; continuations are treated just like :Block-Start; it is possible that the
-;;; continuation may be given a new dest (e.g. by SUBSTITUTE-CONTINUATION), so
-;;; we don't want to delete it.
+;;; If the continuation is :Deleted, then we don't do anything, since
+;;; all semantics have already been flushed. :DELETED-BLOCK-START
+;;; start continuations are treated just like :BLOCK-START; it is
+;;; possible that the continuation may be given a new dest (e.g. by
+;;; SUBSTITUTE-CONTINUATION), so we don't want to delete it.
(defun flush-dest (cont)
(declare (type continuation cont))
(unless (eq (continuation-kind cont) :deleted)
- (assert (continuation-dest cont))
+ (aver (continuation-dest cont))
(setf (continuation-dest cont) nil)
(do-uses (use cont)
(let ((prev (node-prev use)))
(values))
-;;; Do a graph walk backward from Block, marking all predecessor blocks with
-;;; the DELETE-P flag.
+;;; 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))
(unless (block-delete-p block)
(mark-for-deletion pred)))
(values))
-;;; Delete Cont, eliminating both control and value semantics. We set
-;;; FLUSH-P and COMPONENT-REOPTIMIZE similarly to in FLUSH-DEST. Here we must
-;;; get the component from the use block, since the continuation may be a
-;;; :DELETED-BLOCK-START.
+;;; Delete CONT, eliminating both control and value semantics. We set
+;;; FLUSH-P and COMPONENT-REOPTIMIZE similarly to in FLUSH-DEST. Here
+;;; we must get the component from the use block, since the
+;;; continuation may be a :DELETED-BLOCK-START.
;;;
-;;; If Cont has DEST, then it must be the case that the DEST is unreachable,
-;;; since we can't compute the value desired. In this case, we call
-;;; MARK-FOR-DELETION to cause the DEST block and its predecessors to tell
-;;; people to ignore them, and to cause them to be deleted eventually.
+;;; If CONT has DEST, then it must be the case that the DEST is
+;;; unreachable, since we can't compute the value desired. In this
+;;; case, we call MARK-FOR-DELETION to cause the DEST block and its
+;;; predecessors to tell people to ignore them, and to cause them to
+;;; be deleted eventually.
(defun delete-continuation (cont)
(declare (type continuation cont))
- (assert (not (eq (continuation-kind cont) :deleted)))
+ (aver (not (eq (continuation-kind cont) :deleted)))
(do-uses (use cont)
(let ((prev (node-prev use)))
(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.
+;;; 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.
;;;
-;;; We mark the Start as has having no next and remove the last node from
-;;; its Cont's uses. We also flush the DEST for all continuations whose values
-;;; are received by nodes in the block.
+;;; We mark the START as has having no next and remove the last node
+;;; from its CONT's uses. We also flush the DEST for all continuations
+;;; whose values are received by nodes in the block.
(defun delete-block (block)
(declare (type cblock block))
- (assert (block-component block) () "Block is already deleted.")
+ (aver (block-component block)) ; else block is already deleted!
(note-block-deletion block)
(setf (block-delete-p block) t)
(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.
+ ;; 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.
(bind
(let ((lambda (bind-lambda node)))
(unless (eq (functional-kind lambda) :deleted)
- (assert (member (functional-kind lambda)
- '(:let :mv-let :assignment)))
+ (aver (member (functional-kind lambda) '(:let :mv-let :assignment)))
(delete-lambda lambda))))
(exit
(let ((value (exit-value node))
(remove-from-dfo block)
(values))
-;;; Do stuff to indicate that the return node Node is being deleted. We set
-;;; the RETURN to NIL.
+;;; Do stuff to indicate that the return node Node is being deleted.
+;;; We set the RETURN to NIL.
(defun delete-return (node)
(declare (type creturn node))
(let ((fun (return-lambda node)))
- (assert (lambda-return fun))
+ (aver (lambda-return fun))
(setf (lambda-return fun) nil))
(values))
-;;; If any of the Vars in fun were never referenced and was not declared
-;;; IGNORE, then complain.
+;;; 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* (= brevity 3))
+ (unless (policy *compiler-error-context* (= inhibit-warnings 3))
;; ANSI section "3.2.5 Exceptional Situations in the Compiler"
- ;; requires this to be a STYLE-WARNING.
+ ;; requires this to be no more than a STYLE-WARNING.
(compiler-style-warning "The variable ~S is defined but never used."
- (leaf-name var)))
- (setf (leaf-ever-used var) t))))
+ (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 #'.
+;;; 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)
(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.
+;;; 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 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 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.
+;;; -- 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)
(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 CONT, but we don't deal with
-;;; cleaning up any type-specific semantic attachments. If the CONT is :UNUSED
-;;; after deleting this use, then we delete CONT. (Note :UNUSED is not the
-;;; same as no uses. A continuation will only become :UNUSED if it was
-;;; :INSIDE-BLOCK before.)
+;;; Delete a node from a block, deleting the block if there are no
+;;; nodes left. We remove the node from the uses of its CONT, but we
+;;; don't deal with cleaning up any type-specific semantic
+;;; attachments. If the CONT is :UNUSED after deleting this use, then
+;;; we delete CONT. (Note :UNUSED is not the same as no uses. A
+;;; continuation will only become :UNUSED if it was :INSIDE-BLOCK
+;;; before.)
;;;
-;;; 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.
+;;; 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))
(let* ((cont (node-cont node))
(unless (eq (continuation-kind cont) :deleted)
(delete-continuation-use node)
(when (eq (continuation-kind cont) :unused)
- (assert (not (continuation-dest cont)))
+ (aver (not (continuation-dest cont)))
(delete-continuation cont)))
(setf (block-type-asserted block) t)
(setf (node-prev node) nil)
nil)
(t
- (assert (eq prev-kind :block-start))
- (assert (eq node last))
+ (aver (eq prev-kind :block-start))
+ (aver (eq node last))
(let* ((succ (block-succ block))
(next (first succ)))
- (assert (and succ (null (cdr succ))))
+ (aver (and succ (null (cdr succ))))
(cond
((member block succ)
- (with-ir1-environment node
+ (with-ir1-environment-from-node node
(let ((exit (make-exit))
(dummy (make-continuation)))
(setf (continuation-next prev) nil)
- (prev-link exit prev)
+ (link-node-to-previous-continuation exit prev)
(add-continuation-use exit dummy)
(setf (block-last block) exit)))
(setf (node-prev node) nil)
nil)
(t
- (assert (eq (block-start-cleanup block)
- (block-end-cleanup block)))
+ (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))
(setf (node-prev node) nil)
t)))))))
-;;; Return true if NODE has been deleted, false if it is still a valid part
-;;; of IR1.
+;;; 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)))
(and (block-component block)
(not (block-delete-p block))))))))
-;;; 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.
+;;; 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))
- (assert (null (component-new-functions component)))
+ (aver (null (component-new-funs component)))
(setf (component-kind component) :deleted)
(do-blocks (block component)
(setf (block-delete-p block) t))
(dolist (fun (component-lambdas component))
(setf (functional-kind fun) nil)
- (setf (functional-entry-function fun) nil)
+ (setf (functional-entry-fun fun) nil)
(setf (leaf-refs fun) nil)
(delete-functional fun))
(do-blocks (block component)
(type index num-args))
(let ((outside (continuation-dest cont))
(inside (continuation-use cont)))
- (assert (combination-p outside))
+ (aver (combination-p outside))
(unless (combination-p inside)
(give-up-ir1-transform))
(let ((inside-fun (combination-fun inside)))
- (unless (eq (continuation-function-name inside-fun) fun)
+ (unless (eq (continuation-fun-name inside-fun) fun)
(give-up-ir1-transform))
(let ((inside-args (combination-args inside)))
(unless (= (length inside-args) num-args)
\f
;;;; leaf hackery
-;;; Change the Leaf that a Ref refers to.
+;;; 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)
(delete-ref ref)
(setf (ref-leaf ref) leaf)
(let ((ltype (leaf-type leaf)))
- (if (function-type-p ltype)
+ (if (fun-type-p ltype)
(setf (node-derived-type ref) ltype)
(derive-node-type ref ltype)))
(reoptimize-continuation (node-cont ref)))
(values))
-;;; Change all Refs for Old-Leaf to New-Leaf.
+;;; 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 SUBSITIUTE-LEAF, only there is a predicate on the Ref to tell
+;;; 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))
(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.
-#!-sb-fluid (declaim (maybe-inline find-constant))
+;;; 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.
(defun find-constant (object)
- (if (typep object '(or symbol number character instance))
- (or (gethash object *constants*)
- (setf (gethash object *constants*)
- (make-constant :value object
- :name nil
- :type (ctype-of object)
- :where-from :defined)))
- (make-constant :value object
- :name nil
- :type (ctype-of object)
- :where-from :defined)))
+ (if (typep object
+ ;; FIXME: What is the significance of this test? ("things
+ ;; that are worth uniquifying"?)
+ '(or symbol number character instance))
+ (or (gethash object *constants*)
+ (setf (gethash object *constants*)
+ (make-constant :value object
+ :%source-name '.anonymous.
+ :type (ctype-of object)
+ :where-from :defined)))
+ (make-constant :value object
+ :%source-name '.anonymous.
+ :type (ctype-of object)
+ :where-from :defined)))
\f
-;;; 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.
+;;; 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 (entry cont)
(declare (type entry entry) (type continuation cont))
(let ((entry-cleanup (entry-cleanup entry)))
- (dolist (nlx (environment-nlx-info (node-environment entry)) nil)
+ (dolist (nlx (physenv-nlx-info (node-physenv entry)) nil)
(when (and (eq (nlx-info-continuation nlx) cont)
(eq (nlx-info-cleanup nlx) entry-cleanup))
(return nlx)))))
\f
;;;; functional hackery
-;;; If Functional is a Lambda, just return it; if it is an
-;;; optional-dispatch, return the main-entry.
(declaim (ftype (function (functional) clambda) main-entry))
(defun main-entry (functional)
(etypecase functional
(optional-dispatch
(optional-dispatch-main-entry functional))))
-;;; Returns 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.
+;;; 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 (function (functional) boolean) looks-like-an-mv-bind))
(defun looks-like-an-mv-bind (functional)
(and (optional-dispatch-p functional)
(t
(return nil)))))))
-;;; Return true if function is an XEP. This is true of normal XEPs
-;;; (:External kind) and top-level lambdas (:Top-Level kind.)
-#!-sb-fluid (declaim (inline external-entry-point-p))
-(defun external-entry-point-p (fun)
+;;; 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 :top-level)))))
+ (not (null (member (functional-kind fun) '(:external :toplevel)))))
-;;; If Cont'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 continuation-function-name (cont &optional notinline-ok)
+;;; If CONT'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 continuation-fun-name (cont &optional notinline-ok)
(declare (type continuation cont))
(let ((use (continuation-use cont)))
(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-function-p leaf))
- (not (eq (defined-function-inlinep leaf) :notinline))
+ (or (not (defined-fun-p leaf))
+ (not (eq (defined-fun-inlinep leaf) :notinline))
notinline-ok))
- (leaf-name leaf)
+ (leaf-source-name leaf)
nil))
nil)))
-;;; Return the COMBINATION node that is the call to the let Fun.
+;;; Return the COMBINATION node that is the call to the LET FUN.
(defun let-combination (fun)
(declare (type clambda fun))
- (assert (member (functional-kind fun) '(:let :mv-let)))
+ (aver (member (functional-kind fun) '(:let :mv-let)))
(continuation-dest (node-cont (first (leaf-refs fun)))))
-;;; Return the initial value continuation for a let variable or NIL if none.
+;;; Return the initial value continuation 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.
-#!-sb-fluid (declaim (inline combination-lambda))
+;;; Return the LAMBDA that is called by the local CALL.
(defun combination-lambda (call)
(declare (type basic-combination call))
- (assert (eq (basic-combination-kind call) :local))
+ (aver (eq (basic-combination-kind call) :local))
(ref-leaf (continuation-use (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.)")
+ "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
+;;; 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
(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-note "*INLINE-EXPANSION-LIMIT* (~D) was exceeded, ~
+ (compiler-note "*INLINE-EXPANSION-LIMIT* (~W) was exceeded, ~
probably trying to~% ~
inline a recursive function."
*inline-expansion-limit*))
nil)
(t t))))
\f
-;;;; compiler error context determination
-
-(declaim (special *current-path*))
-
-;;; We bind print level and length when printing out messages so that we don't
-;;; dump huge amounts of garbage.
-(declaim (type (or unsigned-byte null)
- *compiler-error-print-level*
- *compiler-error-print-length*
- *compiler-error-print-lines*))
-(defvar *compiler-error-print-level* 3
- #!+sb-doc
- "The value for *PRINT-LEVEL* when printing compiler error messages.")
-(defvar *compiler-error-print-length* 5
- #!+sb-doc
- "The value for *PRINT-LENGTH* when printing compiler error messages.")
-(defvar *compiler-error-print-lines* 5
- #!+sb-doc
- "The value for *PRINT-LINES* when printing compiler error messages.")
-
-(defvar *enclosing-source-cutoff* 1
- #!+sb-doc
- "The maximum number of enclosing non-original source forms (i.e. from
- macroexpansion) that we print in full. For additional enclosing forms, we
- print only the CAR.")
-(declaim (type unsigned-byte *enclosing-source-cutoff*))
-
-;;; We separate the determination of compiler error contexts from the actual
-;;; signalling of those errors by objectifying the error context. This allows
-;;; postponement of the determination of how (and if) to signal the error.
-;;;
-;;; We take care not to reference any of the IR1 so that pending potential
-;;; error messages won't prevent the IR1 from being GC'd. To this end, we
-;;; convert source forms to strings so that source forms that contain IR1
-;;; references (e.g. %DEFUN) don't hold onto the IR.
-(defstruct (compiler-error-context
- #-no-ansi-print-object
- (:print-object (lambda (x stream)
- (print-unreadable-object (x stream :type t)))))
- ;; A list of the stringified CARs of the enclosing non-original source forms
- ;; exceeding the *enclosing-source-cutoff*.
- (enclosing-source nil :type list)
- ;; A list of stringified enclosing non-original source forms.
- (source nil :type list)
- ;; The stringified form in the original source that expanded into Source.
- (original-source (required-argument) :type simple-string)
- ;; A list of prefixes of "interesting" forms that enclose original-source.
- (context nil :type list)
- ;; The FILE-INFO-NAME for the relevant FILE-INFO.
- (file-name (required-argument)
- :type (or pathname (member :lisp :stream)))
- ;; The file position at which the top-level form starts, if applicable.
- (file-position nil :type (or index null))
- ;; The original source part of the source path.
- (original-source-path nil :type list))
-
-;;; If true, this is the node which is used as context in compiler warning
-;;; messages.
-(declaim (type (or null compiler-error-context node) *compiler-error-context*))
-(defvar *compiler-error-context* nil)
-
-;;; a hashtable mapping macro names to source context parsers. Each parser
-;;; function returns the source-context list for that form.
-(defvar *source-context-methods* (make-hash-table))
-
-;;; documentation originally from cmu-user.tex:
-;;; This macro defines how to extract an abbreviated source context from
-;;; the \var{name}d form when it appears in the compiler input.
-;;; \var{lambda-list} is a \code{defmacro} style lambda-list used to
-;;; parse the arguments. The \var{body} should return a list of
-;;; subforms that can be printed on about one line. There are
-;;; predefined methods for \code{defstruct}, \code{defmethod}, etc. If
-;;; no method is defined, then the first two subforms are returned.
-;;; Note that this facility implicitly determines the string name
-;;; associated with anonymous functions.
-;;; So even though SBCL itself only uses this macro within this file, it's a
-;;; reasonable thing to put in SB-EXT in case some dedicated user wants to do
-;;; some heavy tweaking to make SBCL give more informative output about his
-;;; code.
-(defmacro def-source-context (name lambda-list &body body)
- #!+sb-doc
- "DEF-SOURCE-CONTEXT Name Lambda-List Form*
- This macro defines how to extract an abbreviated source context from the
- Named form when it appears in the compiler input. Lambda-List is a DEFMACRO
- style lambda-list used to parse the arguments. The Body should return a
- list of subforms suitable for a \"~{~S ~}\" format string."
- (let ((n-whole (gensym)))
- `(setf (gethash ',name *source-context-methods*)
- #'(lambda (,n-whole)
- (destructuring-bind ,lambda-list ,n-whole ,@body)))))
-
-(def-source-context defstruct (name-or-options &rest slots)
- (declare (ignore slots))
- `(defstruct ,(if (consp name-or-options)
- (car name-or-options)
- name-or-options)))
-
-(def-source-context function (thing)
- (if (and (consp thing) (eq (first thing) 'lambda) (consp (rest thing)))
- `(lambda ,(second thing))
- `(function ,thing)))
-
-;;; Return the first two elements of FORM if FORM is a list. Take the
-;;; CAR of the second form if appropriate.
-(defun source-form-context (form)
- (cond ((atom form) nil)
- ((>= (length form) 2)
- (funcall (gethash (first form) *source-context-methods*
- #'(lambda (x)
- (declare (ignore x))
- (list (first form) (second form))))
- (rest form)))
- (t
- form)))
-
-;;; Given a source path, return the original source form and a description
-;;; of the interesting aspects of the context in which it appeared. The
-;;; context is a list of lists, one sublist per context form. The sublist is a
-;;; list of some of the initial subforms of the context form.
-;;;
-;;; For now, we use the first two subforms of each interesting form. A form is
-;;; interesting if the first element is a symbol beginning with "DEF" and it is
-;;; not the source form. If there is no DEF-mumble, then we use the outermost
-;;; containing form. If the second subform is a list, then in some cases we
-;;; return the car of that form rather than the whole form (i.e. don't show
-;;; defstruct options, etc.)
-(defun find-original-source (path)
- (declare (list path))
- (let* ((rpath (reverse (source-path-original-source path)))
- (tlf (first rpath))
- (root (find-source-root tlf *source-info*)))
- (collect ((context))
- (let ((form root)
- (current (rest rpath)))
- (loop
- (when (atom form)
- (assert (null current))
- (return))
- (let ((head (first form)))
- (when (symbolp head)
- (let ((name (symbol-name head)))
- (when (and (>= (length name) 3) (string= name "DEF" :end1 3))
- (context (source-form-context form))))))
- (when (null current) (return))
- (setq form (nth (pop current) form)))
-
- (cond ((context)
- (values form (context)))
- ((and path root)
- (let ((c (source-form-context root)))
- (values form (if c (list c) nil))))
- (t
- (values '(unable to locate source)
- '((some strange place)))))))))
-
-;;; Convert a source form to a string, formatted suitably for use in
-;;; compiler warnings.
-(defun stringify-form (form &optional (pretty t))
- (let ((*print-level* *compiler-error-print-level*)
- (*print-length* *compiler-error-print-length*)
- (*print-lines* *compiler-error-print-lines*)
- (*print-pretty* pretty))
- (if pretty
- (format nil " ~S~%" form)
- (prin1-to-string form))))
-
-;;; Return a COMPILER-ERROR-CONTEXT structure describing the current error
-;;; context, or NIL if we can't figure anything out. ARGS is a list of things
-;;; that are going to be printed out in the error message, and can thus be
-;;; blown off when they appear in the source context.
-(defun find-error-context (args)
- (let ((context *compiler-error-context*))
- (if (compiler-error-context-p context)
- context
- (let ((path (or *current-path*
- (if context
- (node-source-path context)
- nil))))
- (when (and *source-info* path)
- (multiple-value-bind (form src-context) (find-original-source path)
- (collect ((full nil cons)
- (short nil cons))
- (let ((forms (source-path-forms path))
- (n 0))
- (dolist (src (if (member (first forms) args)
- (rest forms)
- forms))
- (if (>= n *enclosing-source-cutoff*)
- (short (stringify-form (if (consp src)
- (car src)
- src)
- nil))
- (full (stringify-form src)))
- (incf n)))
-
- (let* ((tlf (source-path-tlf-number path))
- (file (find-file-info tlf *source-info*)))
- (make-compiler-error-context
- :enclosing-source (short)
- :source (full)
- :original-source (stringify-form form)
- :context src-context
- :file-name (file-info-name file)
- :file-position
- (multiple-value-bind (ignore pos)
- (find-source-root tlf *source-info*)
- (declare (ignore ignore))
- pos)
- :original-source-path
- (source-path-original-source path))))))))))
-\f
-;;;; printing error messages
-
-;;; We save the context information that we printed out most recently so that
-;;; we don't print it out redundantly.
-
-;;; The last COMPILER-ERROR-CONTEXT that we printed.
-(defvar *last-error-context* nil)
-(declaim (type (or compiler-error-context null) *last-error-context*))
-
-;;; The format string and args for the last error we printed.
-(defvar *last-format-string* nil)
-(defvar *last-format-args* nil)
-(declaim (type (or string null) *last-format-string*))
-(declaim (type list *last-format-args*))
-
-;;; The number of times that the last error message has been emitted, so that
-;;; we can compress duplicate error messages.
-(defvar *last-message-count* 0)
-(declaim (type index *last-message-count*))
-
-;;; If the last message was given more than once, then print out an
-;;; indication of how many times it was repeated. We reset the message count
-;;; when we are done.
-(defun note-message-repeats (&optional (terpri t))
- (cond ((= *last-message-count* 1)
- (when terpri (terpri *error-output*)))
- ((> *last-message-count* 1)
- (format *error-output* "[Last message occurs ~D times.]~2%"
- *last-message-count*)))
- (setq *last-message-count* 0))
-
-;;; Print out the message, with appropriate context if we can find it. If
-;;; If the context is different from the context of the last message we
-;;; printed, then we print the context. If the original source is different
-;;; from the source we are working on, then we print the current source in
-;;; addition to the original source.
-;;;
-;;; We suppress printing of messages identical to the previous, but record
-;;; the number of times that the message is repeated.
-(defun print-compiler-message (format-string format-args)
-
- (declare (type simple-string format-string))
- (declare (type list format-args))
-
- (let ((stream *error-output*)
- (context (find-error-context format-args)))
- (cond
- (context
- (let ((file (compiler-error-context-file-name context))
- (in (compiler-error-context-context context))
- (form (compiler-error-context-original-source context))
- (enclosing (compiler-error-context-enclosing-source context))
- (source (compiler-error-context-source context))
- (last *last-error-context*))
-
- (unless (and last
- (equal file (compiler-error-context-file-name last)))
- (when (pathnamep file)
- (note-message-repeats)
- (setq last nil)
- (format stream "~2&file: ~A~%" (namestring file))))
-
- (unless (and last
- (equal in (compiler-error-context-context last)))
- (note-message-repeats)
- (setq last nil)
- (format stream "~2&in:~{~<~% ~4:;~{ ~S~}~>~^ =>~}~%" in))
-
- (unless (and last
- (string= form
- (compiler-error-context-original-source last)))
- (note-message-repeats)
- (setq last nil)
- (write-string form stream))
-
- (unless (and last
- (equal enclosing
- (compiler-error-context-enclosing-source last)))
- (when enclosing
- (note-message-repeats)
- (setq last nil)
- (format stream "--> ~{~<~%--> ~1:;~A~> ~}~%" enclosing)))
-
- (unless (and last
- (equal source (compiler-error-context-source last)))
- (setq *last-format-string* nil)
- (when source
- (note-message-repeats)
- (dolist (src source)
- (write-line "==>" stream)
- (write-string src stream))))))
- (t
- (note-message-repeats)
- (setq *last-format-string* nil)
- (format stream "~2&")))
-
- (setq *last-error-context* context)
-
- (unless (and (equal format-string *last-format-string*)
- (tree-equal format-args *last-format-args*))
- (note-message-repeats nil)
- (setq *last-format-string* format-string)
- (setq *last-format-args* format-args)
- (let ((*print-level* *compiler-error-print-level*)
- (*print-length* *compiler-error-print-length*)
- (*print-lines* *compiler-error-print-lines*))
- (format stream "~&~?~&" format-string format-args))))
-
- (incf *last-message-count*)
- (values))
-
-(defun print-compiler-condition (condition)
- (declare (type condition condition))
- (let (;; These different classes of conditions have different effects
- ;; on the return codes of COMPILE-FILE, so it's nice for users to be
- ;; able to pick them out by lexical search through the output.
- (what (etypecase condition
- (style-warning 'style-warning)
- (warning 'warning)
- (error 'error))))
- (multiple-value-bind (format-string format-args)
- (if (typep condition 'simple-condition)
- (values (simple-condition-format-control condition)
- (simple-condition-format-arguments condition))
- (values "~A"
- (list (with-output-to-string (s)
- (princ condition s)))))
- (print-compiler-message (format nil
- "caught ~S:~% ~A"
- what
- format-string)
- format-args)))
- (values))
-
-;;; COMPILER-NOTE is vaguely like COMPILER-ERROR and the other
-;;; condition-signalling functions, but it just writes some output instead of
-;;; signalling. (In CMU CL, it did signal a condition, but this didn't seem to
-;;; work all that well; it was weird to have COMPILE-FILE return with
-;;; WARNINGS-P set when the only problem was that the compiler couldn't figure
-;;; out how to compile something as efficiently as it liked.)
-(defun compiler-note (format-string &rest format-args)
- (unless (if *compiler-error-context*
- (policy *compiler-error-context* (= brevity 3))
- (policy nil (= brevity 3)))
- (incf *compiler-note-count*)
- (print-compiler-message (format nil "note: ~A" format-string)
- format-args))
- (values))
-
-;;; The politically correct way to print out progress messages and
-;;; such like. We clear the current error context so that we know that
-;;; it needs to be reprinted, and we also Force-Output so that the
-;;; message gets seen right away.
-(declaim (ftype (function (string &rest t) (values)) compiler-mumble))
-(defun compiler-mumble (format-string &rest format-args)
- (note-message-repeats)
- (setq *last-error-context* nil)
- (apply #'format *error-output* format-string format-args)
- (force-output *error-output*)
- (values))
-
-;;; Return a string that somehow names the code in Component. We use
-;;; the source path for the bind node for an arbitrary entry point to
-;;; find the source context, then return that as a string.
-(declaim (ftype (function (component) simple-string) find-component-name))
-(defun find-component-name (component)
- (let ((ep (first (block-succ (component-head component)))))
- (assert ep () "no entry points?")
- (multiple-value-bind (form context)
- (find-original-source
- (node-source-path (continuation-next (block-start ep))))
- (declare (ignore form))
- (let ((*print-level* 2)
- (*print-pretty* nil))
- (format nil "~{~{~S~^ ~}~^ => ~}" context)))))
-\f
-;;;; condition system interface
-
-;;; Keep track of how many times each kind of condition happens.
-(defvar *compiler-error-count*)
-(defvar *compiler-warning-count*)
-(defvar *compiler-style-warning-count*)
-(defvar *compiler-note-count*)
-
-;;; Keep track of whether any surrounding COMPILE or COMPILE-FILE call
-;;; should return WARNINGS-P or FAILURE-P.
-(defvar *failure-p*)
-(defvar *warnings-p*)
-
-;;; condition handlers established by the compiler. We re-signal the
-;;; condition, if it is not handled, we increment our warning counter
-;;; and print the error message.
-(defun compiler-error-handler (condition)
- (signal condition)
- (incf *compiler-error-count*)
- (setf *warnings-p* t
- *failure-p* t)
- (print-compiler-condition condition)
- (continue condition))
-(defun compiler-warning-handler (condition)
- (signal condition)
- (incf *compiler-warning-count*)
- (setf *warnings-p* t
- *failure-p* t)
- (print-compiler-condition condition)
- (muffle-warning condition))
-(defun compiler-style-warning-handler (condition)
- (signal condition)
- (incf *compiler-style-warning-count*)
- (setf *warnings-p* t)
- (print-compiler-condition condition)
- (muffle-warning condition))
-\f
-;;;; undefined warnings
-
-(defvar *undefined-warning-limit* 3
- #!+sb-doc
- "If non-null, then an upper limit on the number of unknown function or type
- warnings that the compiler will print for any given name in a single
- compilation. This prevents excessive amounts of output when the real
- problem is a missing definition (as opposed to a typo in the use.)")
-
-;;; Make an entry in the *UNDEFINED-WARNINGS* describing a reference
-;;; to Name of the specified Kind. If we have exceeded the warning
-;;; limit, then just increment the count, otherwise note the current
-;;; error context.
-;;;
-;;; Undefined types are noted by a condition handler in
-;;; WITH-COMPILATION-UNIT, which can potentially be invoked outside
-;;; the compiler, hence the BOUNDP check.
-(defun note-undefined-reference (name kind)
- (unless (and (boundp '*lexenv*)
- ;; FIXME: I'm pretty sure the BREVITY test below isn't
- ;; a good idea; we should have BREVITY affect compiler
- ;; notes, not STYLE-WARNINGs. And I'm not sure what the
- ;; BOUNDP '*LEXENV* test above is for; it's likely
- ;; a good idea, but it probably deserves an explanatory
- ;; comment.
- (policy nil (= brevity 3)))
- (let* ((found (dolist (warning *undefined-warnings* nil)
- (when (and (equal (undefined-warning-name warning) name)
- (eq (undefined-warning-kind warning) kind))
- (return warning))))
- (res (or found
- (make-undefined-warning :name name :kind kind))))
- (unless found (push res *undefined-warnings*))
- (when (or (not *undefined-warning-limit*)
- (< (undefined-warning-count res) *undefined-warning-limit*))
- (push (find-error-context (list name))
- (undefined-warning-warnings res)))
- (incf (undefined-warning-count res))))
- (values))
-\f
;;;; careful call
;;; Apply a function to some arguments, returning a list of the values
(return-from careful-call (values nil nil))))))
t))
\f
-;;;; utilities used at run-time for parsing keyword args in IR1
+;;;; utilities used at run-time for parsing &KEY args in IR1
-;;; This function is used by the result of Parse-Deftransform to find
-;;; the continuation for the value of the keyword argument Key in the
-;;; list of continuations Args. It returns the continuation if the
+;;; This function is used by the result of PARSE-DEFTRANSFORM to find
+;;; the continuation for the value of the &KEY argument KEY in the
+;;; list of continuations ARGS. It returns the continuation if the
;;; keyword is present, or NIL otherwise. The legality and
;;; constantness of the keywords should already have been checked.
(declaim (ftype (function (list keyword) (or continuation null))
(when (eq (continuation-value (first arg)) key)
(return (second arg)))))
-;;; This function is used by the result of Parse-Deftransform to
-;;; verify that alternating continuations in Args are constant and
+;;; This function is used by the result of PARSE-DEFTRANSFORM to
+;;; verify that alternating continuations in ARGS are constant and
;;; that there is an even number of args.
-(declaim (ftype (function (list) boolean) check-keywords-constant))
-(defun check-keywords-constant (args)
+(declaim (ftype (function (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-continuation-p (first arg)))
(return nil))))
-;;; This function is used by the result of Parse-Deftransform to
-;;; verify that the list of continuations Args is a well-formed
-;;; keyword arglist and that only keywords present in the list Keys
-;;; are supplied.
+;;; This function is used by the result of PARSE-DEFTRANSFORM to
+;;; verify that the list of continuations ARGS is a well-formed &KEY
+;;; arglist and that only keywords present in the list KEYS are
+;;; supplied.
(declaim (ftype (function (list list) boolean) check-transform-keys))
(defun check-transform-keys (args keys)
- (and (check-keywords-constant args)
+ (and (check-key-args-constant args)
(do ((arg args (cddr arg)))
((null arg) t)
(unless (member (continuation-value (first arg)) keys)
(defun %event (info node)
(incf (event-info-count info))
(when (and (>= (event-info-level info) *event-note-threshold*)
- (if node
- (policy node (= brevity 0))
- (policy nil (= brevity 0))))
+ (policy (or node *lexenv*)
+ (= inhibit-warnings 0)))
(let ((*compiler-error-context* node))
(compiler-note (event-info-description info))))