;; until it is assigned a block, and may be also be temporarily
;; unused during later manipulations of IR1. In a consistent
;; state there should never be any mention of :UNUSED
- ;; continuations. Next can have a non-null value if the next node
+ ;; continuations. NEXT can have a non-null value if the next node
;; has already been determined.
;;
;; :DELETED
;; and will be null in a :INSIDE-BLOCK continuation when this is the
;; CONT of the LAST.
(next nil :type (or node null))
- ;; an assertion on the type of this continuation's value
- (asserted-type *wild-type* :type ctype)
;; cached type of this continuation's value. If NIL, then this must
;; be recomputed: see CONTINUATION-DERIVED-TYPE.
(%derived-type nil :type (or ctype null))
- ;; Node where this continuation is used, if unique. This is always
+ ;; the node where this continuation is used, if unique. This is always
;; null in :DELETED and :UNUSED continuations, and is never null in
;; :INSIDE-BLOCK continuations. In a :BLOCK-START continuation, the
- ;; Block's START-USES indicate whether NIL means no uses or more
+ ;; BLOCK's START-USES indicate whether NIL means no uses or more
;; than one use.
(use nil :type (or node null))
;; the basic block this continuation is in. This is null only in
;; the optimizer for this node type doesn't care, it can elect not
;; to clear this flag.
(reoptimize t :type boolean)
- ;; an indication of what we have proven about how this contination's
- ;; type assertion is satisfied:
- ;;
- ;; NIL
- ;; No type check is necessary (proven type is a subtype of the assertion.)
- ;;
- ;; T
- ;; A type check is needed.
- ;;
- ;; :DELETED
- ;; Don't do a type check, but believe (intersect) the assertion.
- ;; A T check can be changed to :DELETED if we somehow prove the
- ;; check is unnecessary, or if we eliminate it through a policy
- ;; decision.
- ;;
- ;; :NO-CHECK
- ;; Type check generation sets the slot to this if a check is
- ;; called for, but it believes it has proven that the check won't
- ;; be done for policy reasons or because a safe implementation
- ;; will be used. In the latter case, LTN must ensure that a safe
- ;; implementation *is* used.
- ;;
- ;; :ERROR
- ;; There is a compile-time type error in some use of this
- ;; continuation. A type check should still be generated, but be
- ;; careful.
- ;;
- ;; This is computed lazily by CONTINUATION-DERIVED-TYPE, so use
- ;; CONTINUATION-TYPE-CHECK instead of the %'ed slot accessor.
- (%type-check t :type (member t nil :deleted :no-check :error))
+ ;; Cached type which is checked by DEST. If NIL, then this must be
+ ;; recomputed: see CONTINUATION-EXTERNALLY-CHECKABLE-TYPE.
+ (%externally-checkable-type nil :type (or null ctype))
;; something or other that the back end annotates this continuation with
(info nil)
;; uses of this continuation in the lexical environment. They are
(lexenv-uses nil :type list))
(def!method print-object ((x continuation) stream)
- (print-unreadable-object (x stream :type t :identity t)))
+ (print-unreadable-object (x stream :type t :identity t)
+ (format stream " #~D" (cont-num x))))
(defstruct (node (:constructor nil)
(:copier nil))
- ;; the bottom-up derived type for this node. This does not take into
- ;; consideration output type assertions on this node (actually on its CONT).
+ ;; unique ID for debugging
+ #!+sb-show (id (new-object-id) :read-only t)
+ ;; the bottom-up derived type for this node.
(derived-type *wild-type* :type ctype)
;; True if this node needs to be optimized. This is set to true
;; whenever something changes about the value of a continuation
;; indicates what we do controlwise after evaluating this node. This
;; may be null during IR1 conversion.
(cont nil :type (or continuation null))
- ;; the continuation that this node is the next of. This is null
+ ;; the continuation that this node is the NEXT of. This is null
;; during IR1 conversion when we haven't linked the node in yet or
;; in nodes that have been deleted from the IR1 by UNLINK-NODE.
(prev nil :type (or continuation null))
;; is indicated by the magic ORIGINAL-SOURCE-START marker. The first
;; element of the original source is the "form number", which is the
;; ordinal number of this form in a depth-first, left-to-right walk
- ;; of the truly top-level form in which this appears.
+ ;; of the truly-top-level form in which this appears.
;;
;; Following is a list of integers describing the path taken through
;; the source to get to this point:
;; (K L M ...) => (NTH K (NTH L (NTH M ...)))
;;
- ;; The last element in the list is the top-level form number, which
+ ;; The last element in the list is the top level form number, which
;; is the ordinal number (in this call to the compiler) of the truly
- ;; top-level form containing the original source.
+ ;; top level form containing the original source.
(source-path *current-path* :type list)
;; If this node is in a tail-recursive position, then this is set to
;; T. At the end of IR1 (in physical environment analysis) this is
;;; Flags that are used to indicate various things about a block, such
;;; as what optimizations need to be done on it:
;;; -- REOPTIMIZE is set when something interesting happens the uses of a
-;;; continuation whose Dest is in this block. This indicates that the
+;;; continuation whose DEST is in this block. This indicates that the
;;; value-driven (forward) IR1 optimizations should be done on this block.
;;; -- FLUSH-P is set when code in this block becomes potentially flushable,
;;; usually due to a continuation's DEST becoming null.
;;; checking blocks we have already checked.
;;; -- DELETE-P is true when this block is used to indicate that this block
;;; has been determined to be unreachable and should be deleted. IR1
-;;; phases should not attempt to examine or modify blocks with DELETE-P
+;;; phases should not attempt to examine or modify blocks with DELETE-P
;;; set, since they may:
;;; - be in the process of being deleted, or
;;; - have no successors, or
;;; is set when a continuation type assertion is strengthened.
;;; TEST-MODIFIED is set whenever the test for the ending IF has
;;; changed (may be true when there is no IF.)
-(def-boolean-attribute block
+(!def-boolean-attribute block
reoptimize flush-p type-check delete-p type-asserted test-modified)
+;;; FIXME: Tweak so that definitions of e.g. BLOCK-DELETE-P is
+;;; findable by grep for 'def.*block-delete-p'.
(macrolet ((frob (slot)
`(defmacro ,(symbolicate "BLOCK-" slot) (block)
`(block-attributep (block-flags ,block) ,',slot))))
(flags (block-attributes reoptimize flush-p type-check type-asserted
test-modified)
:type attributes)
- ;; CMU CL had a KILL slot here, documented as "set used by
- ;; constraint propagation", which was used in constraint propagation
- ;; as a list of LAMBDA-VARs killed, and in copy propagation as an
- ;; SSET, representing I dunno what. I (WHN) found this confusing,
- ;; and furthermore it caused type errors when I was trying to make
- ;; the compiler produce fully general LAMBDA functions directly
- ;; (instead of doing as CMU CL always did, producing extra little
- ;; functions which return the LAMDBA you need) and therefore taking
- ;; a new path through the compiler. So I split this into two:
- ;; KILL-LIST = list of LAMBDA-VARs killed, used in constraint propagation
- ;; KILL-SSET = an SSET value, used in copy propagation
- (kill-list nil :type list)
- (kill-sset nil :type (or sset null))
+ ;; in constraint propagation: list of LAMBDA-VARs killed in this block
+ ;; in copy propagation: list of killed TNs
+ (kill nil)
;; other sets used in constraint propagation and/or copy propagation
(gen nil)
(in nil)
(out nil)
;; the component this block is in, or NIL temporarily during IR1
;; conversion and in deleted blocks
- (component *current-component* :type (or component null))
+ (component (progn
+ (aver-live-component *current-component*)
+ *current-component*)
+ :type (or component null))
;; a flag used by various graph-walking code to determine whether
;; this block has been processed already or what. We make this
;; initially NIL so that FIND-INITIAL-DFO doesn't have to scan the
(flag nil)
;; some kind of info used by the back end
(info nil)
- ;; If true, then constraints that hold in this block and its
- ;; successors by merit of being tested by its IF predecessor.
+ ;; constraints that hold in this block and its successors by merit
+ ;; of being tested by its IF predecessors.
(test-constraint nil :type (or sset null)))
(def!method print-object ((cblock cblock) stream)
(print-unreadable-object (cblock stream :type t :identity t)
- (format stream ":START c~D" (cont-num (block-start cblock)))))
+ (format stream "~W :START c~W"
+ (block-number cblock)
+ (cont-num (block-start cblock)))))
;;; The BLOCK-ANNOTATION class is inherited (via :INCLUDE) by
;;; different BLOCK-INFO annotation structures so that code
;; The IR1 block that this block is in the INFO for.
(block (missing-arg) :type cblock)
;; the next and previous block in emission order (not DFO). This
- ;; determines which block we drop though to, and also used to chain
- ;; together overflow blocks that result from splitting of IR2 blocks
- ;; in lifetime analysis.
+ ;; determines which block we drop though to, and is also used to
+ ;; chain together overflow blocks that result from splitting of IR2
+ ;; blocks in lifetime analysis.
(next nil :type (or block-annotation null))
(prev nil :type (or block-annotation null)))
;;; A COMPONENT structure provides a handle on a connected piece of
;;; the flow graph. Most of the passes in the compiler operate on
;;; COMPONENTs rather than on the entire flow graph.
-(defstruct (component (:copier nil))
+;;;
+;;; According to the CMU CL internals/front.tex, the reason for
+;;; separating compilation into COMPONENTs is
+;;; to increase the efficiency of large block compilations. In
+;;; addition to improving locality of reference and reducing the
+;;; size of flow analysis problems, this allows back-end data
+;;; structures to be reclaimed after the compilation of each
+;;; component.
+(defstruct (component (:copier nil)
+ (:constructor
+ make-component (head tail &aux (last-block tail))))
+ ;; unique ID for debugging
+ #!+sb-show (id (new-object-id) :read-only t)
;; the kind of component
;;
;; (The terminology here is left over from before
;; The possibilities are:
;; NIL
;; an ordinary component, containing non-top-level code
- ;; :TOP-LEVEL
+ ;; :TOPLEVEL
;; a component containing only load-time code
- ;; :COMPLEX-TOP-LEVEL
+ ;; :COMPLEX-TOPLEVEL
;; In the old system, before FUNCTIONAL-HAS-EXTERNAL-REFERENCES-P
;; was defined, this was necessarily a component containing both
- ;; top-level and run-time code. Now this state is also used for
+ ;; top level and run-time code. Now this state is also used for
;; a component with HAS-EXTERNAL-REFERENCES-P functionals in it.
;; :INITIAL
;; the result of initial IR1 conversion, on which component
;; :DELETED
;; debris left over from component analysis
;;
- ;; See also COMPONENT-TOP-LEVELISH-P.
- (kind nil :type (member nil :top-level :complex-top-level :initial :deleted))
+ ;; See also COMPONENT-TOPLEVELISH-P.
+ (kind nil :type (member nil :toplevel :complex-toplevel :initial :deleted))
;; the blocks that are the dummy head and tail of the DFO
;;
;; Entry/exit points have these blocks as their
- ;; predecessors/successors. Null temporarily. The start and return
- ;; from each non-deleted function is linked to the component head
- ;; and tail. Until physical environment analysis links NLX entry
- ;; stubs to the component head, every successor of the head is a
- ;; function start (i.e. begins with a BIND node.)
- (head nil :type (or null cblock))
- (tail nil :type (or null cblock))
+ ;; predecessors/successors. The start and return from each
+ ;; non-deleted function is linked to the component head and
+ ;; tail. Until physical environment analysis links NLX entry stubs
+ ;; to the component head, every successor of the head is a function
+ ;; start (i.e. begins with a BIND node.)
+ (head (missing-arg) :type cblock)
+ (tail (missing-arg) :type cblock)
+ ;; New blocks are inserted before this.
+ (last-block (missing-arg) :type cblock)
;; This becomes a list of the CLAMBDA structures for all functions
;; in this component. OPTIONAL-DISPATCHes are represented only by
;; their XEP and other associated lambdas. This doesn't contain any
;; deleted or LET lambdas.
;;
;; Note that logical associations between CLAMBDAs and COMPONENTs
- ;; seem to exist for a while before this is initialized. In
- ;; particular, I got burned by writing some code to use this value
- ;; to decide which components need LOCAL-CALL-ANALYZE, when it turns
- ;; out that LOCAL-CALL-ANALYZE had a role in initializing this value
+ ;; seem to exist for a while before this is initialized. See e.g.
+ ;; the NEW-FUNCTIONALS slot. In particular, I got burned by writing
+ ;; some code to use this value to decide which components need
+ ;; LOCALL-ANALYZE-COMPONENT, when it turns out that
+ ;; LOCALL-ANALYZE-COMPONENT had a role in initializing this value
;; (and DFO stuff does too, maybe). Also, even after it's
;; initialized, it might change as CLAMBDAs are deleted or merged.
;; -- WHN 2001-09-30
(lambdas () :type list)
- ;; a list of FUNCTIONAL structures for functions that are newly
- ;; converted, and haven't been local-call analyzed yet. Initially
- ;; functions are not in the LAMBDAS list. LOCAL-CALL-ANALYZE moves
- ;; them there (possibly as LETs, or implicitly as XEPs if an
- ;; OPTIONAL-DISPATCH.) Between runs of LOCAL-CALL-ANALYZE there may
- ;; be some debris of converted or even deleted functions in this
- ;; list.
- (new-functions () :type list)
+ ;; a list of FUNCTIONALs for functions that are newly converted, and
+ ;; haven't been local-call analyzed yet. Initially functions are not
+ ;; in the LAMBDAS list. Local call analysis moves them there
+ ;; (possibly as LETs, or implicitly as XEPs if an OPTIONAL-DISPATCH.)
+ ;; Between runs of local call analysis there may be some debris of
+ ;; converted or even deleted functions in this list.
+ (new-functionals () :type list)
;; If this is true, then there is stuff in this component that could
;; benefit from further IR1 optimization.
(reoptimize t :type boolean)
(reanalyze nil :type boolean)
;; some sort of name for the code in this component
(name "<unknown>" :type simple-string)
- ;; some kind of info used by the back end
- (info nil)
+ ;; When I am a child, this is :NO-IR2-YET.
+ ;; In my adulthood, IR2 stores notes to itself here.
+ ;; After I have left the great wheel and am staring into the GC, this
+ ;; is set to :DEAD to indicate that it's a gruesome error to operate
+ ;; on me (e.g. by using me as *CURRENT-COMPONENT*, or by pushing
+ ;; LAMBDAs onto my NEW-FUNCTIONALS, as in sbcl-0.pre7.115).
+ (info :no-ir2-yet :type (or ir2-component (member :no-ir2-yet :dead)))
;; the SOURCE-INFO structure describing where this component was
;; compiled from
(source-info *source-info* :type source-info)
;; arguments for the note, or the FUN-TYPE that would have
;; enabled the transformation but failed to match.
(failed-optimizations (make-hash-table :test 'eq) :type hash-table)
- ;; This is similar to NEW-FUNCTIONS, but is used when a function has
- ;; already been analyzed, but new references have been added by
- ;; inline expansion. Unlike NEW-FUNCTIONS, this is not disjoint from
- ;; COMPONENT-LAMBDAS.
- (reanalyze-functions nil :type list))
+ ;; This is similar to NEW-FUNCTIONALS, but is used when a function
+ ;; has already been analyzed, but new references have been added by
+ ;; inline expansion. Unlike NEW-FUNCTIONALS, this is not disjoint
+ ;; from COMPONENT-LAMBDAS.
+ (reanalyze-functionals nil :type list))
(defprinter (component :identity t)
name
+ #!+sb-show id
(reanalyze :test reanalyze))
-;;; Before sbcl-0.7.0, there were :TOP-LEVEL things which were magical
+;;; Check that COMPONENT is suitable for roles which involve adding
+;;; new code. (gotta love imperative programming with lotso in-place
+;;; side effects...)
+(defun aver-live-component (component)
+ ;; FIXME: As of sbcl-0.pre7.115, we're asserting that
+ ;; COMPILE-COMPONENT hasn't happened yet. Might it be even better
+ ;; (certainly stricter, possibly also correct...) to assert that
+ ;; IR1-FINALIZE hasn't happened yet?
+ (aver (not (eql (component-info component) :dead))))
+
+;;; Before sbcl-0.7.0, there were :TOPLEVEL things which were magical
;;; in multiple ways. That's since been refactored into the orthogonal
;;; properties "optimized for locall with no arguments" and "externally
;;; visible/referenced (so don't delete it)". The code <0.7.0 did a lot
;;; this function is a sort of literal translation of those tests into
;;; the new world.
;;;
-;;; FIXME: After things settle down, bare :TOP-LEVEL might go away, at
+;;; FIXME: After things settle down, bare :TOPLEVEL might go away, at
;;; which time it might be possible to replace the COMPONENT-KIND
-;;; :TOP-LEVEL mess with a flag COMPONENT-HAS-EXTERNAL-REFERENCES-P
+;;; :TOPLEVEL mess with a flag COMPONENT-HAS-EXTERNAL-REFERENCES-P
;;; along the lines of FUNCTIONAL-HAS-EXTERNAL-REFERENCES-P.
-(defun lambda-top-levelish-p (clambda)
- (or (eql (lambda-kind clambda) :top-level)
+(defun lambda-toplevelish-p (clambda)
+ (or (eql (lambda-kind clambda) :toplevel)
(lambda-has-external-references-p clambda)))
-(defun component-top-levelish-p (component)
+(defun component-toplevelish-p (component)
(member (component-kind component)
- '(:top-level :complex-top-level)))
+ '(:toplevel :complex-toplevel)))
;;; A CLEANUP structure represents some dynamic binding action. Blocks
;;; are annotated with the current CLEANUP so that dynamic bindings
;;; TNs, or eventually stack slots and registers). -- WHN 2001-09-29
(defstruct (physenv (:copier nil))
;; the function that allocates this physical environment
- (function (missing-arg) :type clambda)
+ (lambda (missing-arg) :type clambda :read-only t)
#| ; seems not to be used as of sbcl-0.pre7.51
;; a list of all the lambdas that allocate variables in this
;; physical environment
;; some kind of info used by the back end
(info nil))
(defprinter (physenv :identity t)
- function
+ lambda
(closure :test closure)
(nlx-info :test nlx-info))
;;; end up tail-recursive causes TAIL-SET merging.
(defstruct (tail-set)
;; a list of all the LAMBDAs in this tail set
- (functions nil :type list)
+ (funs nil :type list)
;; our current best guess of the type returned by these functions.
;; This is the union across all the functions of the return node's
;; RESULT-TYPE, excluding local calls.
;; some info used by the back end
(info nil))
(defprinter (tail-set :identity t)
- functions
+ funs
type
(info :test info))
-;;; The NLX-Info structure is used to collect various information
-;;; about non-local exits. This is effectively an annotation on the
+;;; An NLX-INFO structure is used to collect various information about
+;;; non-local exits. This is effectively an annotation on the
;;; CONTINUATION, although it is accessed by searching in the
;;; PHYSENV-NLX-INFO.
(def!struct (nlx-info (:make-load-form-fun ignore-it))
;;
;; This slot is primarily an indication of where this exit delivers
;; its values to (if any), but it is also used as a sort of name to
- ;; allow us to find the NLX-Info that corresponds to a given exit.
- ;; For this purpose, the Entry must also be used to disambiguate,
+ ;; allow us to find the NLX-INFO that corresponds to a given exit.
+ ;; For this purpose, the ENTRY must also be used to disambiguate,
;; since exits to different places may deliver their result to the
;; same continuation.
(continuation (missing-arg) :type continuation)
;; the entry stub inserted by physical environment analysis. This is
- ;; a block containing a call to the %NLX-Entry funny function that
+ ;; a block containing a call to the %NLX-ENTRY funny function that
;; has the original exit destination as its successor. Null only
;; temporarily.
(target nil :type (or cblock null))
;;; hacking the flow graph.
(def!struct (leaf (:make-load-form-fun ignore-it)
(:constructor nil))
- ;; some name for this leaf. The exact significance of the name
- ;; depends on what kind of leaf it is. In a LAMBDA-VAR or
- ;; GLOBAL-VAR, this is the symbol name of the variable. In a
- ;; functional that is from a DEFUN, this is the defined name. In
- ;; other functionals, this is a descriptive string.
- (name nil :type t)
+ ;; unique ID for debugging
+ #!+sb-show (id (new-object-id) :read-only t)
+ ;; (For public access to this slot, use LEAF-SOURCE-NAME.)
+ ;;
+ ;; the name of LEAF as it appears in the source, e.g. 'FOO or '(SETF
+ ;; FOO) or 'N or '*Z*, or the special .ANONYMOUS. value if there's
+ ;; no name for this thing in the source (as can happen for
+ ;; FUNCTIONALs, e.g. for anonymous LAMBDAs or for functions for
+ ;; top-level forms; and can also happen for anonymous constants) or
+ ;; perhaps also if the match between the name and the thing is
+ ;; skewed enough (e.g. for macro functions or method functions) that
+ ;; we don't want to have that name affect compilation
+ ;;
+ ;; (We use .ANONYMOUS. here more or less the way we'd ordinarily use
+ ;; NIL, but we're afraid to use NIL because it's a symbol which could
+ ;; be the name of a leaf, if only the constant named NIL.)
+ ;;
+ ;; The value of this slot in can affect ordinary runtime behavior,
+ ;; e.g. of special variables and known functions, not just debugging.
+ ;;
+ ;; See also the LEAF-DEBUG-NAME function and the
+ ;; FUNCTIONAL-%DEBUG-NAME slot.
+ (%source-name (missing-arg)
+ :type (or symbol (and cons (satisfies legal-fun-name-p)))
+ :read-only t)
;; the type which values of this leaf must have
(type *universal-type* :type ctype)
;; where the TYPE information came from:
;; some kind of info used by the back end
(info nil))
+;;; LEAF name operations
+;;;
+;;; KLUDGE: wants CLOS..
+(defun leaf-has-source-name-p (leaf)
+ (not (eq (leaf-%source-name leaf)
+ '.anonymous.)))
+(defun leaf-source-name (leaf)
+ (aver (leaf-has-source-name-p leaf))
+ (leaf-%source-name leaf))
+(defun leaf-debug-name (leaf)
+ (if (functional-p leaf)
+ ;; FUNCTIONALs have additional %DEBUG-NAME behavior.
+ (functional-debug-name leaf)
+ ;; Other objects just use their source name.
+ ;;
+ ;; (As of sbcl-0.pre7.85, there are a few non-FUNCTIONAL
+ ;; anonymous objects, (anonymous constants..) and those would
+ ;; fail here if we ever tried to get debug names from them, but
+ ;; it looks as though it's never interesting to get debug names
+ ;; from them, so it's moot. -- WHN)
+ (leaf-source-name leaf)))
+
;;; The CONSTANT structure is used to represent known constant values.
;;; If NAME is not null, then it is the name of the named constant
;;; which this leaf corresponds to, otherwise this is an anonymous
;; the value of the constant
(value nil :type t))
(defprinter (constant :identity t)
- (name :test name)
+ (%source-name :test %source-name)
value)
;;; The BASIC-VAR structure represents information common to all
;;; variables which don't correspond to known local functions.
-(def!struct (basic-var (:include leaf) (:constructor nil))
+(def!struct (basic-var (:include leaf)
+ (:constructor nil))
;; Lists of the set nodes for this variable.
(sets () :type list))
;;; The GLOBAL-VAR structure represents a value hung off of the symbol
-;;; NAME. We use a :CONSTANT VAR when we know that the thing is a
-;;; constant, but don't know what the value is at compile time.
+;;; NAME.
(def!struct (global-var (:include basic-var))
;; kind of variable described
(kind (missing-arg)
- :type (member :special :global-function :constant :global)))
+ :type (member :special :global-function :global)))
(defprinter (global-var :identity t)
- name
+ %source-name
+ #!+sb-show id
(type :test (not (eq type *universal-type*)))
(where-from :test (not (eq where-from :assumed)))
kind)
-;;; The SLOT-ACCESSOR structure represents slot accessor functions. It
-;;; is a subtype of GLOBAL-VAR to make it look more like a normal
-;;; function.
-(def!struct (slot-accessor (:include global-var
- (where-from :defined)
- (kind :global-function)))
- ;; The description of the structure that this is an accessor for.
- (for (missing-arg) :type sb!xc:class)
- ;; The slot description of the slot.
- (slot (missing-arg)))
-(defprinter (slot-accessor :identity t)
- name
- for
- slot)
-
;;; A DEFINED-FUN represents a function that is defined in the same
;;; compilation block, or that has an inline expansion, or that has a
;;; non-NIL INLINEP value. Whenever we change the INLINEP state (i.e.
;; LET-converted. Null if we haven't converted the expansion yet.
(functional nil :type (or functional null)))
(defprinter (defined-fun :identity t)
- name
+ %source-name
+ #!+sb-show id
inlinep
(functional :test functional))
\f
;;; We don't normally manipulate function types for defined functions,
;;; but if someone wants to know, an approximation is there.
(def!struct (functional (:include leaf
+ (%source-name '.anonymous.)
(where-from :defined)
(type (specifier-type 'function))))
+ ;; (For public access to this slot, use LEAF-DEBUG-NAME.)
+ ;;
+ ;; the name of FUNCTIONAL for debugging purposes, or NIL if we
+ ;; should just let the SOURCE-NAME fall through
+ ;;
+ ;; Unlike the SOURCE-NAME slot, this slot's value should never
+ ;; affect ordinary code behavior, only debugging/diagnostic behavior.
+ ;;
+ ;; Ha. Ah, the starry-eyed idealism of the writer of the above
+ ;; paragraph. FUNCTION-LAMBDA-EXPRESSION's behaviour, as of
+ ;; sbcl-0.7.11.x, differs if the name of the a function is a string
+ ;; or not, as if it is a valid function name then it can look for an
+ ;; inline expansion.
+ ;;
+ ;; The value of this slot can be anything, except that it shouldn't
+ ;; be a legal function name, since otherwise debugging gets
+ ;; confusing. (If a legal function name is a good name for the
+ ;; function, it should be in %SOURCE-NAME, and then we shouldn't
+ ;; need a %DEBUG-NAME.) In SBCL as of 0.pre7.87, it's always a
+ ;; string unless it's NIL, since that's how CMU CL represented debug
+ ;; names. However, eventually I (WHN) think it we should start using
+ ;; list values instead, since they have much nicer print properties
+ ;; (abbreviation, skipping package prefixes when unneeded, and
+ ;; renaming package prefixes when we do things like renaming SB!EXT
+ ;; to SB-EXT).
+ ;;
+ ;; E.g. for the function which implements (DEFUN FOO ...), we could
+ ;; have
+ ;; %SOURCE-NAME=FOO
+ ;; %DEBUG-NAME=NIL
+ ;; for the function which implements the top level form
+ ;; (IN-PACKAGE :FOO) we could have
+ ;; %SOURCE-NAME=NIL
+ ;; %DEBUG-NAME="top level form (IN-PACKAGE :FOO)"
+ ;; for the function which implements FOO in
+ ;; (DEFUN BAR (...) (FLET ((FOO (...) ...)) ...))
+ ;; we could have
+ ;; %SOURCE-NAME=FOO
+ ;; %DEBUG-NAME="FLET FOO in BAR"
+ ;; and for the function which implements FOO in
+ ;; (DEFMACRO FOO (...) ...)
+ ;; we could have
+ ;; %SOURCE-NAME=FOO (or maybe .ANONYMOUS.?)
+ ;; %DEBUG-NAME="DEFMACRO FOO"
+ (%debug-name nil
+ :type (or null (not (satisfies legal-fun-name-p)))
+ :read-only t)
;; some information about how this function is used. These values
;; are meaningful:
;;
;; continuation for the call.
;;
;; :MV-LET
- ;; Similar to :LET, but the call is an MV-CALL.
+ ;; Similar to :LET (as per FUNCTIONAL-LETLIKE-P), but the call
+ ;; is an MV-CALL.
;;
;; :ASSIGNMENT
- ;; similar to a LET, but can have other than one call as long as
- ;; there is at most one non-tail call.
+ ;; similar to a LET (as per FUNCTIONAL-SOMEWHAT-LETLIKE-P), but
+ ;; can have other than one call as long as there is at most
+ ;; one non-tail call.
;;
;; :OPTIONAL
- ;; a lambda that is an entry-point for an optional-dispatch.
+ ;; a lambda that is an entry point for an OPTIONAL-DISPATCH.
;; Similar to NIL, but requires greater caution, since local call
;; analysis may create new references to this function. Also, the
;; function cannot be deleted even if it has *no* references. The
;;
;; :EXTERNAL
;; an external entry point lambda. The function it is an entry
- ;; for is in the ENTRY-FUNCTION slot.
+ ;; for is in the ENTRY-FUN slot.
;;
- ;; :TOP-LEVEL
- ;; a top-level lambda, holding a compiled top-level form.
+ ;; :TOPLEVEL
+ ;; a top level lambda, holding a compiled top level form.
;; Compiled very much like NIL, but provides an indication of
- ;; top-level context. A top-level lambda should have *no*
- ;; references. Its Entry-Function is a self-pointer.
+ ;; top level context. A :TOPLEVEL lambda should have *no*
+ ;; references. Its ENTRY-FUN is a self-pointer.
;;
- ;; :TOP-LEVEL-XEP
- ;; After a component is compiled, we clobber any top-level code
+ ;; :TOPLEVEL-XEP
+ ;; After a component is compiled, we clobber any top level code
;; references to its non-closure XEPs with dummy FUNCTIONAL
;; structures having this kind. This prevents the retained
- ;; top-level code from holding onto the IR for the code it
+ ;; top level code from holding onto the IR for the code it
;; references.
;;
;; :ESCAPE
;; :DELETED
;; This function has been found to be uncallable, and has been
;; marked for deletion.
- (kind nil :type (member nil :optional :deleted :external :top-level
+ (kind nil :type (member nil :optional :deleted :external :toplevel
:escape :cleanup :let :mv-let :assignment
- :top-level-xep))
+ :toplevel-xep))
;; Is this a function that some external entity (e.g. the fasl dumper)
;; refers to, so that even when it appears to have no references, it
;; shouldn't be deleted? In the old days (before
;; sbcl-0.pre7.37.flaky5.2) this was sort of implicitly true when
- ;; KIND was :TOP-LEVEL. Now it must be set explicitly, both for
- ;; :TOP-LEVEL functions and for any other kind of functions that we
+ ;; KIND was :TOPLEVEL. Now it must be set explicitly, both for
+ ;; :TOPLEVEL functions and for any other kind of functions that we
;; want to dump or return from #'CL:COMPILE or whatever.
- (has-external-references-p nil)
+ (has-external-references-p nil)
;; In a normal function, this is the external entry point (XEP)
;; lambda for this function, if any. Each function that is used
;; other than in a local call has an XEP, and all of the
;; In an XEP lambda (indicated by the :EXTERNAL kind), this is the
;; function that the XEP is an entry-point for. The body contains
;; local calls to all the actual entry points in the function. In a
- ;; :TOP-LEVEL lambda (which is its own XEP) this is a self-pointer.
+ ;; :TOPLEVEL lambda (which is its own XEP) this is a self-pointer.
;;
;; With all other kinds, this is null.
- (entry-function nil :type (or functional null))
- ;; the value of any inline/notinline declaration for a local function
+ (entry-fun nil :type (or functional null))
+ ;; the value of any inline/notinline declaration for a local
+ ;; function (or NIL in any case if no inline expansion is available)
(inlinep nil :type inlinep)
;; If we have a lambda that can be used as in inline expansion for
;; this function, then this is it. If there is no source-level
- ;; lambda corresponding to this function then this is Null (but then
+ ;; lambda corresponding to this function then this is null (but then
;; INLINEP will always be NIL as well.)
(inline-expansion nil :type list)
- ;; the lexical environment that the inline-expansion should be converted in
+ ;; the lexical environment that the INLINE-EXPANSION should be converted in
(lexenv *lexenv* :type lexenv)
;; the original function or macro lambda list, or :UNSPECIFIED if
;; this is a compiler created function
;; various rare miscellaneous info that drives code generation & stuff
(plist () :type list))
(defprinter (functional :identity t)
- name)
+ %source-name
+ %debug-name
+ #!+sb-show id)
+
+;;; Is FUNCTIONAL LET-converted? (where we're indifferent to whether
+;;; it returns one value or multiple values)
+(defun functional-letlike-p (functional)
+ (member (functional-kind functional)
+ '(:let :mv-let)))
+
+;;; Is FUNCTIONAL sorta LET-converted? (where even an :ASSIGNMENT counts)
+;;;
+;;; FIXME: I (WHN) don't understand this one well enough to give a good
+;;; definition or even a good function name, it's just a literal copy
+;;; of a CMU CL idiom. Does anyone have a better name or explanation?
+(defun functional-somewhat-letlike-p (functional)
+ (or (functional-letlike-p functional)
+ (eql (functional-kind functional) :assignment)))
+
+;;; FUNCTIONAL name operations
+(defun functional-debug-name (functional)
+ ;; FUNCTIONAL-%DEBUG-NAME takes precedence over FUNCTIONAL-SOURCE-NAME
+ ;; here because we want different debug names for the functions in
+ ;; DEFUN FOO and FLET FOO even though they have the same source name.
+ (or (functional-%debug-name functional)
+ ;; Note that this will cause an error if the function is
+ ;; anonymous. In SBCL (as opposed to CMU CL) we make all
+ ;; FUNCTIONALs have debug names. The CMU CL code didn't bother
+ ;; in many FUNCTIONALs, especially those which were likely to be
+ ;; optimized away before the user saw them. However, getting
+ ;; that right requires a global understanding of the code,
+ ;; which seems bad, so we just require names for everything.
+ (leaf-source-name functional)))
;;; The CLAMBDA only deals with required lexical arguments. Special,
;;; optional, keyword and rest arguments are handled by transforming
(:predicate lambda-p)
(:constructor make-lambda)
(:copier copy-lambda))
- ;; list of LAMBDA-VAR descriptors for args
- (vars nil :type list)
+ ;; list of LAMBDA-VAR descriptors for arguments
+ (vars nil :type list :read-only t)
;; If this function was ever a :OPTIONAL function (an entry-point
;; for an OPTIONAL-DISPATCH), then this is that OPTIONAL-DISPATCH.
;; The optional dispatch will be :DELETED if this function is no
;; If this CLAMBDA is a LET, then this slot holds the LAMBDA whose
;; LETS list we are in, otherwise it is a self-pointer.
(home nil :type (or clambda null))
- ;; a list of all the all the lambdas that have been LET-substituted
- ;; in this lambda. This is only non-null in lambdas that aren't
- ;; LETs.
- (lets () :type list)
- ;; a list of all the ENTRY nodes in this function and its LETs, or
- ;; null in a LET
- (entries () :type list)
- ;; a list of all the functions directly called from this function
- ;; (or one of its LETs) using a non-LET local call. This may include
- ;; deleted functions because nobody bothers to clear them out.
- (calls () :type list)
+ ;; all the lambdas that have been LET-substituted in this lambda.
+ ;; This is only non-null in lambdas that aren't LETs.
+ (lets nil :type list)
+ ;; all the ENTRY nodes in this function and its LETs, or null in a LET
+ (entries nil :type list)
+ ;; CLAMBDAs which are locally called by this lambda, and other
+ ;; objects (closed-over LAMBDA-VARs and XEPs) which this lambda
+ ;; depends on in such a way that DFO shouldn't put them in separate
+ ;; components.
+ (calls-or-closes nil :type list)
;; the TAIL-SET that this LAMBDA is in. This is null during creation.
;;
;; In CMU CL, and old SBCL, this was also NILed out when LET
;; in effect.
(call-lexenv nil :type (or lexenv null)))
(defprinter (clambda :conc-name lambda- :identity t)
- name
+ %source-name
+ %debug-name
+ #!+sb-show id
(type :test (not (eq type *universal-type*)))
(where-from :test (not (eq where-from :assumed)))
- (vars :prin1 (mapcar #'leaf-name vars)))
+ (vars :prin1 (mapcar #'leaf-source-name vars)))
;;; The OPTIONAL-DISPATCH leaf is used to represent hairy lambdas. It
;;; is a FUNCTIONAL, like LAMBDA. Each legal number of arguments has a
;; know what they are doing.
(main-entry nil :type (or clambda null)))
(defprinter (optional-dispatch :identity t)
- name
+ %source-name
+ %debug-name
+ #!+sb-show id
(type :test (not (eq type *universal-type*)))
(where-from :test (not (eq where-from :assumed)))
arglist
;; original Lisp code. This is set to NIL in &KEY arguments that are
;; defaulted using the SUPPLIED-P arg.
(default nil :type t)
- ;; the actual key for a &KEY argument. Note that in ANSI CL this is not
- ;; necessarily a keyword: (DEFUN FOO (&KEY ((BAR BAR))) ..).
+ ;; the actual key for a &KEY argument. Note that in ANSI CL this is
+ ;; not necessarily a keyword: (DEFUN FOO (&KEY ((BAR BAR))) ...).
(key nil :type symbol))
(defprinter (arg-info :identity t)
(specialp :test specialp)
;;; LAMBDA-VARs with no REFs are considered to be deleted; physical
;;; environment analysis isn't done on these variables, so the back
;;; end must check for and ignore unreferenced variables. Note that a
-;;; deleted lambda-var may have sets; in this case the back end is
-;;; still responsible for propagating the Set-Value to the set's Cont.
+;;; deleted LAMBDA-VAR may have sets; in this case the back end is
+;;; still responsible for propagating the SET-VALUE to the set's CONT.
(def!struct (lambda-var (:include basic-var))
;; true if this variable has been declared IGNORE
(ignorep nil :type boolean)
;; good subject for flow analysis.
(constraints nil :type (or sset null)))
(defprinter (lambda-var :identity t)
- name
+ %source-name
+ #!+sb-show id
(type :test (not (eq type *universal-type*)))
(where-from :test (not (eq where-from :assumed)))
(ignorep :test ignorep)
;;; A REF represents a reference to a LEAF. REF-REOPTIMIZE is
;;; initially (and forever) NIL, since REFs don't receive any values
;;; and don't have any IR1 optimizer.
-(defstruct (ref (:include node (:reoptimize nil))
- (:constructor make-ref (derived-type leaf))
+(defstruct (ref (:include node (reoptimize nil))
+ (:constructor make-ref
+ (leaf
+ &aux (leaf-type (leaf-type leaf))
+ (derived-type
+ (make-single-value-type leaf-type))))
(:copier nil))
;; The leaf referenced.
(leaf nil :type leaf))
(defprinter (ref :identity t)
+ #!+sb-show id
leaf)
;;; Naturally, the IF node always appears at the end of a block.
alternative)
(defstruct (cset (:include node
- (derived-type *universal-type*))
+ (derived-type (make-single-value-type
+ *universal-type*)))
(:conc-name set-)
(:predicate set-p)
(:constructor make-set)
;; the kind of function call being made. :LOCAL means that this is a
;; local call to a function in the same component, and that argument
;; syntax checking has been done, etc. Calls to known global
- ;; functions are represented by storing the FUNCTION-INFO for the
+ ;; functions are represented by storing the FUN-INFO for the
;; function in this slot. :FULL is a call to an (as yet) unknown
;; function. :ERROR is like :FULL, but means that we have discovered
;; that the call contains an error, and should not be reconsidered
;; for optimization.
- (kind :full :type (or (member :local :full :error) function-info))
+ (kind :full :type (or (member :local :full :error) fun-info))
;; some kind of information attached to this node by the back end
(info nil))
(:constructor make-combination (fun))
(:copier nil)))
(defprinter (combination :identity t)
+ #!+sb-show id
(fun :prin1 (continuation-use fun))
(args :prin1 (mapcar (lambda (x)
(if x
(defprinter (creturn :conc-name return- :identity t)
lambda
result-type)
+
+;;; The CAST node represents type assertions. The check for
+;;; TYPE-TO-CHECK is performed and then the VALUE is declared to be of
+;;; type ASSERTED-TYPE.
+(defstruct (cast (:include node)
+ (:constructor %make-cast))
+ (asserted-type (missing-arg) :type ctype)
+ (type-to-check (missing-arg) :type ctype)
+ ;; an indication of what we have proven about how this type
+ ;; assertion is satisfied:
+ ;;
+ ;; NIL
+ ;; No type check is necessary (VALUE type is a subtype of the TYPE-TO-CHECK.)
+ ;;
+ ;; T
+ ;; A type check is needed.
+ (%type-check t :type (member t nil))
+ ;; the continuations which is checked
+ (value (missing-arg) :type continuation))
+(defprinter (cast :identity t)
+ %type-check
+ value
+ asserted-type
+ type-to-check)
\f
;;;; non-local exit support
;;;;
;;;; lexical exits.
;;; The ENTRY node serves to mark the start of the dynamic extent of a
-;;; lexical exit. It is the mess-up node for the corresponding :Entry
+;;; lexical exit. It is the mess-up node for the corresponding :ENTRY
;;; cleanup.
(defstruct (entry (:include node)
(:copier nil))
- ;; All of the Exit nodes for potential non-local exits to this point.
+ ;; All of the EXIT nodes for potential non-local exits to this point.
(exits nil :type list)
;; The cleanup for this entry. NULL only temporarily.
(cleanup nil :type (or cleanup null)))
-(defprinter (entry :identity t))
+(defprinter (entry :identity t)
+ #!+sb-show id)
;;; The EXIT node marks the place at which exit code would be emitted,
;;; if necessary. This is interposed between the uses of the exit
;;; original exit continuation is the exit node's CONT.
(defstruct (exit (:include node)
(:copier nil))
- ;; The Entry node that this is an exit for. If null, this is a
+ ;; the ENTRY node that this is an exit for. If null, this is a
;; degenerate exit. A degenerate exit is used to "fill" an empty
;; block (which isn't allowed in IR1.) In a degenerate exit, Value
;; is always also null.
(entry nil :type (or entry null))
- ;; The continuation yeilding the value we are to exit with. If NIL,
+ ;; the continuation yielding the value we are to exit with. If NIL,
;; then no value is desired (as in GO).
(value nil :type (or continuation null)))
(defprinter (exit :identity t)
+ #!+sb-show id
(entry :test entry)
(value :test value))
\f