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I've tried to build stage3 with -Wleading-whitespace=blanks -Wtrailing-whitespace=blank -Wno-error=leading-whitespace=blanks -Wno-error=trailing-whitespace=blank added to STRICT_WARN and that expectably resulted in about 2744 unique trailing whitespace warnings and 124837 leading whitespace warnings when excluding *.md files (which obviously is in big part a generator issue). Others from that are generator related, I think those need to be solved later. The following patch just fixes up the easy case (trailing whitespace), which could be easily automated: for i in `find . -name \*.h -o -name \*.cc -o -name \*.c | xargs grep -l '[ ]$' | grep -v testsuite/`; do sed -i -e 's/[ ]*$//' $i; done I've excluded files which I knew are obviously generated or go FE. Is there anything else we'd want to avoid the changes? Due to patch size, I've split it between gcc/ part (this patch) and rest (include/, libiberty/, libgcc/, libcpp/, libstdc++-v3/). 2024-10-24 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com> gcc/ * lra-assigns.cc: Remove trailing whitespace. * symtab.cc: Likewise. * stmt.cc: Likewise. * cgraphbuild.cc: Likewise. * cfgcleanup.cc: Likewise. * loop-init.cc: Likewise. * df-problems.cc: Likewise. * diagnostic-macro-unwinding.cc: Likewise. * langhooks.h: Likewise. * except.cc: Likewise. * tree-vect-loop.cc: Likewise. * coverage.cc: Likewise. * hash-table.cc: Likewise. * ggc-page.cc: Likewise. * gimple-ssa-strength-reduction.cc: Likewise. * tree-parloops.cc: Likewise. * internal-fn.cc: Likewise. * ipa-split.cc: Likewise. * calls.cc: Likewise. * reorg.cc: Likewise. * sbitmap.h: Likewise. * omp-offload.cc: Likewise. * cfgrtl.cc: Likewise. * reginfo.cc: Likewise. * gengtype.h: Likewise. * omp-general.h: Likewise. * ipa-comdats.cc: Likewise. * gimple-range-edge.h: Likewise. * tree-ssa-structalias.cc: Likewise. * target.def: Likewise. * basic-block.h: Likewise. * graphite-isl-ast-to-gimple.cc: Likewise. * auto-profile.cc: Likewise. * optabs.cc: Likewise. * gengtype-lex.l: Likewise. * optabs.def: Likewise. * ira-build.cc: Likewise. * ira.cc: Likewise. * function.h: Likewise. * tree-ssa-propagate.cc: Likewise. * gcov-io.cc: Likewise. * builtin-types.def: Likewise. * ddg.cc: Likewise. * lra-spills.cc: Likewise. * cfg.cc: Likewise. * bitmap.cc: Likewise. * gimple-range-gori.h: Likewise. * tree-ssa-loop-im.cc: Likewise. * cfghooks.h: Likewise. * genmatch.cc: Likewise. * explow.cc: Likewise. * lto-streamer-in.cc: Likewise. * graphite-scop-detection.cc: Likewise. * ipa-prop.cc: Likewise. * gcc.cc: Likewise. * vec.h: Likewise. * cfgexpand.cc: Likewise. * config/alpha/vms.h: Likewise. * config/alpha/alpha.cc: Likewise. * config/alpha/driver-alpha.cc: Likewise. * config/alpha/elf.h: Likewise. * config/iq2000/iq2000.h: Likewise. * config/iq2000/iq2000.cc: Likewise. * config/pa/pa-64.h: Likewise. * config/pa/som.h: Likewise. * config/pa/pa.cc: Likewise. * config/pa/pa.h: Likewise. * config/pa/pa32-regs.h: Likewise. * config/c6x/c6x.cc: Likewise. * config/openbsd-stdint.h: Likewise. * config/elfos.h: Likewise. * config/lm32/lm32.cc: Likewise. * config/lm32/lm32.h: Likewise. * config/lm32/lm32-protos.h: Likewise. * config/darwin-c.cc: Likewise. * config/rx/rx.cc: Likewise. * config/host-darwin.h: Likewise. * config/netbsd.h: Likewise. * config/ia64/ia64.cc: Likewise. * config/ia64/freebsd.h: Likewise. * config/avr/avr-c.cc: Likewise. * config/avr/avr.cc: Likewise. * config/avr/avr-arch.h: Likewise. * config/avr/avr.h: Likewise. * config/avr/stdfix.h: Likewise. * config/avr/gen-avr-mmcu-specs.cc: Likewise. * config/avr/avr-log.cc: Likewise. * config/avr/elf.h: Likewise. * config/avr/gen-avr-mmcu-texi.cc: Likewise. * config/avr/avr-devices.cc: Likewise. * config/nvptx/nvptx.cc: Likewise. * config/vx-common.h: Likewise. * config/sol2.cc: Likewise. * config/rl78/rl78.cc: Likewise. * config/cris/cris.cc: Likewise. * config/arm/symbian.h: Likewise. * config/arm/unknown-elf.h: Likewise. * config/arm/linux-eabi.h: Likewise. * config/arm/arm.cc: Likewise. * config/arm/arm-mve-builtins.h: Likewise. * config/arm/bpabi.h: Likewise. * config/arm/vxworks.h: Likewise. * config/arm/arm.h: Likewise. * config/arm/aout.h: Likewise. * config/arm/elf.h: Likewise. * config/host-linux.cc: Likewise. * config/sh/sh_treg_combine.cc: Likewise. * config/sh/vxworks.h: Likewise. * config/sh/elf.h: Likewise. * config/sh/netbsd-elf.h: Likewise. * config/sh/sh.cc: Likewise. * config/sh/embed-elf.h: Likewise. * config/sh/sh.h: Likewise. * config/darwin-driver.cc: Likewise. * config/m32c/m32c.cc: Likewise. * config/frv/frv.cc: Likewise. * config/openbsd.h: Likewise. * config/aarch64/aarch64-protos.h: Likewise. * config/aarch64/aarch64-builtins.cc: Likewise. * config/aarch64/aarch64-cost-tables.h: Likewise. * config/aarch64/aarch64.cc: Likewise. * config/bfin/bfin.cc: Likewise. * config/bfin/bfin.h: Likewise. * config/bfin/bfin-protos.h: Likewise. * config/i386/gmm_malloc.h: Likewise. * config/i386/djgpp.h: Likewise. * config/i386/sol2.h: Likewise. * config/i386/stringop.def: Likewise. * config/i386/i386-features.cc: Likewise. * config/i386/openbsdelf.h: Likewise. * config/i386/cpuid.h: Likewise. * config/i386/i386.h: Likewise. * config/i386/smmintrin.h: Likewise. * config/i386/avx10_2-512convertintrin.h: Likewise. * config/i386/i386-options.cc: Likewise. * config/i386/i386-opts.h: Likewise. * config/i386/i386-expand.cc: Likewise. * config/i386/avx512dqintrin.h: Likewise. * config/i386/wmmintrin.h: Likewise. * config/i386/gnu-user.h: Likewise. * config/i386/host-mingw32.cc: Likewise. * config/i386/avx10_2bf16intrin.h: Likewise. * config/i386/cygwin.h: Likewise. * config/i386/driver-i386.cc: Likewise. * config/i386/biarch64.h: Likewise. * config/i386/host-cygwin.cc: Likewise. * config/i386/cygming.h: Likewise. * config/i386/i386-builtins.cc: Likewise. * config/i386/avx10_2convertintrin.h: Likewise. * config/i386/i386.cc: Likewise. * config/i386/gas.h: Likewise. * config/i386/freebsd.h: Likewise. * config/mingw/winnt-cxx.cc: Likewise. * config/mingw/winnt.cc: Likewise. * config/h8300/h8300.cc: Likewise. * config/host-solaris.cc: Likewise. * config/m32r/m32r.h: Likewise. * config/m32r/m32r.cc: Likewise. * config/darwin.h: Likewise. * config/sparc/linux64.h: Likewise. * config/sparc/sparc-protos.h: Likewise. * config/sparc/sysv4.h: Likewise. * config/sparc/sparc.h: Likewise. * config/sparc/linux.h: Likewise. * config/sparc/freebsd.h: Likewise. * config/sparc/sparc.cc: Likewise. * config/gcn/gcn-run.cc: Likewise. * config/gcn/gcn.cc: Likewise. * config/gcn/gcn-tree.cc: Likewise. * config/kopensolaris-gnu.h: Likewise. * config/nios2/nios2.h: Likewise. * config/nios2/elf.h: Likewise. * config/nios2/nios2.cc: Likewise. * config/host-netbsd.cc: Likewise. * config/rtems.h: Likewise. * config/pdp11/pdp11.cc: Likewise. * config/pdp11/pdp11.h: Likewise. * config/mn10300/mn10300.cc: Likewise. * config/mn10300/linux.h: Likewise. * config/moxie/moxie.h: Likewise. * config/moxie/moxie.cc: Likewise. * config/rs6000/aix71.h: Likewise. * config/rs6000/vec_types.h: Likewise. * config/rs6000/xcoff.h: Likewise. * config/rs6000/rs6000.cc: Likewise. * config/rs6000/rs6000-internal.h: Likewise. * config/rs6000/rs6000-p8swap.cc: Likewise. * config/rs6000/rs6000-c.cc: Likewise. * config/rs6000/aix.h: Likewise. * config/rs6000/rs6000-logue.cc: Likewise. * config/rs6000/rs6000-string.cc: Likewise. * config/rs6000/rs6000-call.cc: Likewise. * config/rs6000/ppu_intrinsics.h: Likewise. * config/rs6000/altivec.h: Likewise. * config/rs6000/darwin.h: Likewise. * config/rs6000/host-darwin.cc: Likewise. * config/rs6000/freebsd64.h: Likewise. * config/rs6000/spu2vmx.h: Likewise. * config/rs6000/linux.h: Likewise. * config/rs6000/si2vmx.h: Likewise. * config/rs6000/driver-rs6000.cc: Likewise. * config/rs6000/freebsd.h: Likewise. * config/vxworksae.h: Likewise. * config/mips/frame-header-opt.cc: Likewise. * config/mips/mips.h: Likewise. * config/mips/mips.cc: Likewise. * config/mips/sde.h: Likewise. * config/darwin-protos.h: Likewise. * config/mcore/mcore-elf.h: Likewise. * config/mcore/mcore.h: Likewise. * config/mcore/mcore.cc: Likewise. * config/epiphany/epiphany.cc: Likewise. * config/fr30/fr30.h: Likewise. * config/fr30/fr30.cc: Likewise. * config/riscv/riscv-vector-builtins-shapes.cc: Likewise. * config/riscv/riscv-vector-builtins-bases.cc: Likewise. * config/visium/visium.h: Likewise. * config/mmix/mmix.cc: Likewise. * config/v850/v850.cc: Likewise. * config/v850/v850-c.cc: Likewise. * config/v850/v850.h: Likewise. * config/stormy16/stormy16.cc: Likewise. * config/stormy16/stormy16-protos.h: Likewise. * config/stormy16/stormy16.h: Likewise. * config/arc/arc.cc: Likewise. * config/vxworks.cc: Likewise. * config/microblaze/microblaze-c.cc: Likewise. * config/microblaze/microblaze-protos.h: Likewise. * config/microblaze/microblaze.h: Likewise. * config/microblaze/microblaze.cc: Likewise. * config/freebsd-spec.h: Likewise. * config/m68k/m68kelf.h: Likewise. * config/m68k/m68k.cc: Likewise. * config/m68k/netbsd-elf.h: Likewise. * config/m68k/linux.h: Likewise. * config/freebsd.h: Likewise. * config/host-openbsd.cc: Likewise. * regcprop.cc: Likewise. * dumpfile.cc: Likewise. * combine.cc: Likewise. * tree-ssa-forwprop.cc: Likewise. * ipa-profile.cc: Likewise. * hw-doloop.cc: Likewise. * opts.cc: Likewise. * gcc-ar.cc: Likewise. * tree-cfg.cc: Likewise. * incpath.cc: Likewise. * tree-ssa-sccvn.cc: Likewise. * function.cc: Likewise. * genattrtab.cc: Likewise. * rtl.def: Likewise. * genchecksum.cc: Likewise. * profile.cc: Likewise. * df-core.cc: Likewise. * tree-pretty-print.cc: Likewise. * tree.h: Likewise. * plugin.cc: Likewise. * tree-ssa-loop-ch.cc: Likewise. * emit-rtl.cc: Likewise. * haifa-sched.cc: Likewise. * gimple-range-edge.cc: Likewise. * range-op.cc: Likewise. * tree-ssa-ccp.cc: Likewise. * dwarf2cfi.cc: Likewise. * recog.cc: Likewise. * vtable-verify.cc: Likewise. * system.h: Likewise. * regrename.cc: Likewise. * tree-ssa-dom.cc: Likewise. * loop-unroll.cc: Likewise. * lra-constraints.cc: Likewise. * pretty-print.cc: Likewise. * ifcvt.cc: Likewise. * ipa.cc: Likewise. * alloc-pool.h: Likewise. * collect2.cc: Likewise. * pointer-query.cc: Likewise. * cfgloop.cc: Likewise. * toplev.cc: Likewise. * sese.cc: Likewise. * gengtype.cc: Likewise. * gimplify-me.cc: Likewise. * double-int.cc: Likewise. * bb-reorder.cc: Likewise. * dwarf2out.cc: Likewise. * tree-ssa-loop-ivcanon.cc: Likewise. * tree-ssa-reassoc.cc: Likewise. * cgraph.cc: Likewise. * sel-sched.cc: Likewise. * attribs.cc: Likewise. * expr.cc: Likewise. * tree-ssa-scopedtables.h: Likewise. * gimple-range-cache.cc: Likewise. * ipa-pure-const.cc: Likewise. * tree-inline.cc: Likewise. * genhooks.cc: Likewise. * gimple-range-phi.h: Likewise. * shrink-wrap.cc: Likewise. * tree.cc: Likewise. * gimple.cc: Likewise. * backend.h: Likewise. * opts-common.cc: Likewise. * cfg-flags.def: Likewise. * gcse-common.cc: Likewise. * tree-ssa-scopedtables.cc: Likewise. * ccmp.cc: Likewise. * builtins.def: Likewise. * builtin-attrs.def: Likewise. * postreload.cc: Likewise. * sched-deps.cc: Likewise. * ipa-inline-transform.cc: Likewise. * tree-vect-generic.cc: Likewise. * ipa-polymorphic-call.cc: Likewise. * builtins.cc: Likewise. * sel-sched-ir.cc: Likewise. * trans-mem.cc: Likewise. * ipa-visibility.cc: Likewise. * cgraph.h: Likewise. * tree-ssa-phiopt.cc: Likewise. * genopinit.cc: Likewise. * ipa-inline.cc: Likewise. * omp-low.cc: Likewise. * ipa-utils.cc: Likewise. * tree-ssa-math-opts.cc: Likewise. * tree-ssa-ifcombine.cc: Likewise. * gimple-range.cc: Likewise. * ipa-fnsummary.cc: Likewise. * ira-color.cc: Likewise. * value-prof.cc: Likewise. * varasm.cc: Likewise. * ipa-icf.cc: Likewise. * ira-emit.cc: Likewise. * lto-streamer.h: Likewise. * lto-wrapper.cc: Likewise. * regs.h: Likewise. * gengtype-parse.cc: Likewise. * alias.cc: Likewise. * lto-streamer.cc: Likewise. * real.h: Likewise. * wide-int.h: Likewise. * targhooks.cc: Likewise. * gimple-ssa-warn-access.cc: Likewise. * real.cc: Likewise. * ipa-reference.cc: Likewise. * bitmap.h: Likewise. * ginclude/float.h: Likewise. * ginclude/stddef.h: Likewise. * ginclude/stdarg.h: Likewise. * ginclude/stdatomic.h: Likewise. * optabs.h: Likewise. * sel-sched-ir.h: Likewise. * convert.cc: Likewise. * cgraphunit.cc: Likewise. * lra-remat.cc: Likewise. * tree-if-conv.cc: Likewise. * gcov-dump.cc: Likewise. * tree-predcom.cc: Likewise. * dominance.cc: Likewise. * gimple-range-cache.h: Likewise. * ipa-devirt.cc: Likewise. * rtl.h: Likewise. * ubsan.cc: Likewise. * tree-ssa.cc: Likewise. * ssa.h: Likewise. * cse.cc: Likewise. * jump.cc: Likewise. * hwint.h: Likewise. * caller-save.cc: Likewise. * coretypes.h: Likewise. * ipa-fnsummary.h: Likewise. * tree-ssa-strlen.cc: Likewise. * modulo-sched.cc: Likewise. * cgraphclones.cc: Likewise. * lto-cgraph.cc: Likewise. * hw-doloop.h: Likewise. * data-streamer.h: Likewise. * compare-elim.cc: Likewise. * profile-count.h: Likewise. * tree-vect-loop-manip.cc: Likewise. * ree.cc: Likewise. * reload.cc: Likewise. * tree-ssa-loop-split.cc: Likewise. * tree-into-ssa.cc: Likewise. * gcse.cc: Likewise. * cfgloopmanip.cc: Likewise. * df.h: Likewise. * fold-const.cc: Likewise. * wide-int.cc: Likewise. * gengtype-state.cc: Likewise. * sanitizer.def: Likewise. * tree-ssa-sink.cc: Likewise. * target-hooks-macros.h: Likewise. * tree-ssa-pre.cc: Likewise. * gimple-pretty-print.cc: Likewise. * ipa-utils.h: Likewise. * tree-outof-ssa.cc: Likewise. * tree-ssa-coalesce.cc: Likewise. * gimple-match.h: Likewise. * tree-ssa-loop-niter.cc: Likewise. * tree-loop-distribution.cc: Likewise. * tree-emutls.cc: Likewise. * tree-eh.cc: Likewise. * varpool.cc: Likewise. * ssa-iterators.h: Likewise. * asan.cc: Likewise. * reload1.cc: Likewise. * cfgloopanal.cc: Likewise. * tree-vectorizer.cc: Likewise. * simplify-rtx.cc: Likewise. * opts-global.cc: Likewise. * gimple-ssa-store-merging.cc: Likewise. * expmed.cc: Likewise. * tree-ssa-loop-prefetch.cc: Likewise. * tree-ssa-dse.h: Likewise. * tree-vect-stmts.cc: Likewise. * gimple-fold.cc: Likewise. * lra-coalesce.cc: Likewise. * data-streamer-out.cc: Likewise. * diagnostic.cc: Likewise. * tree-ssa-alias.cc: Likewise. * tree-vect-patterns.cc: Likewise. * common/common-target.def: Likewise. * common/config/rx/rx-common.cc: Likewise. * common/config/msp430/msp430-common.cc: Likewise. * common/config/avr/avr-common.cc: Likewise. * common/config/i386/i386-common.cc: Likewise. * common/config/pdp11/pdp11-common.cc: Likewise. * common/config/rs6000/rs6000-common.cc: Likewise. * common/config/mcore/mcore-common.cc: Likewise. * graphite.cc: Likewise. * gimple-low.cc: Likewise. * genmodes.cc: Likewise. * gimple-loop-jam.cc: Likewise. * lto-streamer-out.cc: Likewise. * predict.cc: Likewise. * omp-expand.cc: Likewise. * gimple-array-bounds.cc: Likewise. * predict.def: Likewise. * opts.h: Likewise. * tree-stdarg.cc: Likewise. * gimplify.cc: Likewise. * ira-lives.cc: Likewise. * loop-doloop.cc: Likewise. * lra.cc: Likewise. * gimple-iterator.h: Likewise. * tree-sra.cc: Likewise. gcc/fortran/ * trans-openmp.cc: Remove trailing whitespace. * trans-common.cc: Likewise. * match.h: Likewise. * scanner.cc: Likewise. * gfortranspec.cc: Likewise. * io.cc: Likewise. * iso-c-binding.def: Likewise. * iso-fortran-env.def: Likewise. * types.def: Likewise. * openmp.cc: Likewise. * f95-lang.cc: Likewise. gcc/analyzer/ * state-purge.cc: Remove trailing whitespace. * region-model.h: Likewise. * region-model.cc: Likewise. * program-point.cc: Likewise. * exploded-graph.h: Likewise. * program-state.cc: Likewise. * supergraph.cc: Likewise. gcc/c-family/ * c-ubsan.cc: Remove trailing whitespace. * stub-objc.cc: Likewise. * c-pragma.cc: Likewise. * c-ppoutput.cc: Likewise. * c-indentation.cc: Likewise. * c-ada-spec.cc: Likewise. * c-opts.cc: Likewise. * c-common.cc: Likewise. * c-format.cc: Likewise. * c-omp.cc: Likewise. * c-objc.h: Likewise. * c-cppbuiltin.cc: Likewise. * c-attribs.cc: Likewise. * c-target.def: Likewise. * c-common.h: Likewise. gcc/c/ * c-typeck.cc: Remove trailing whitespace. * gimple-parser.cc: Likewise. * c-parser.cc: Likewise. * c-decl.cc: Likewise. gcc/cp/ * vtable-class-hierarchy.cc: Remove trailing whitespace. * typeck2.cc: Likewise. * decl.cc: Likewise. * init.cc: Likewise. * semantics.cc: Likewise. * module.cc: Likewise. * rtti.cc: Likewise. * cxx-pretty-print.cc: Likewise. * cvt.cc: Likewise. * mangle.cc: Likewise. * name-lookup.h: Likewise. * coroutines.cc: Likewise. * error.cc: Likewise. * lambda.cc: Likewise. * tree.cc: Likewise. * g++spec.cc: Likewise. * decl2.cc: Likewise. * cp-tree.h: Likewise. * parser.cc: Likewise. * pt.cc: Likewise. * call.cc: Likewise. * lex.cc: Likewise. * cp-lang.cc: Likewise. * cp-tree.def: Likewise. * constexpr.cc: Likewise. * typeck.cc: Likewise. * name-lookup.cc: Likewise. * optimize.cc: Likewise. * search.cc: Likewise. * mapper-client.cc: Likewise. * ptree.cc: Likewise. * class.cc: Likewise. gcc/jit/ * docs/examples/tut04-toyvm/toyvm.cc: Remove trailing whitespace. gcc/lto/ * lto-object.cc: Remove trailing whitespace. * lto-symtab.cc: Likewise. * lto-partition.cc: Likewise. * lang-specs.h: Likewise. * lto-lang.cc: Likewise. gcc/objc/ * objc-encoding.cc: Remove trailing whitespace. * objc-map.h: Likewise. * objc-next-runtime-abi-01.cc: Likewise. * objc-act.cc: Likewise. * objc-map.cc: Likewise. gcc/objcp/ * objcp-decl.cc: Remove trailing whitespace. * objcp-lang.cc: Likewise. * objcp-decl.h: Likewise. gcc/rust/ * util/optional.h: Remove trailing whitespace. * util/expected.h: Likewise. * util/rust-unicode-data.h: Likewise. gcc/m2/ * mc-boot/GFpuIO.cc: Remove trailing whitespace. * mc-boot/GFIO.cc: Likewise. * mc-boot/GFormatStrings.cc: Likewise. * mc-boot/GCmdArgs.cc: Likewise. * mc-boot/GDebug.h: Likewise. * mc-boot/GM2Dependent.cc: Likewise. * mc-boot/GRTint.cc: Likewise. * mc-boot/GDebug.cc: Likewise. * mc-boot/GmcError.cc: Likewise. * mc-boot/Gmcp4.cc: Likewise. * mc-boot/GM2RTS.cc: Likewise. * mc-boot/GIO.cc: Likewise. * mc-boot/Gmcp5.cc: Likewise. * mc-boot/GDynamicStrings.cc: Likewise. * mc-boot/Gmcp1.cc: Likewise. * mc-boot/GFormatStrings.h: Likewise. * mc-boot/Gmcp2.cc: Likewise. * mc-boot/Gmcp3.cc: Likewise. * pge-boot/GFIO.cc: Likewise. * pge-boot/GDebug.h: Likewise. * pge-boot/GM2Dependent.cc: Likewise. * pge-boot/GDebug.cc: Likewise. * pge-boot/GM2RTS.cc: Likewise. * pge-boot/GSymbolKey.cc: Likewise. * pge-boot/GIO.cc: Likewise. * pge-boot/GIndexing.cc: Likewise. * pge-boot/GDynamicStrings.cc: Likewise. * pge-boot/GFormatStrings.h: Likewise. gcc/go/ * go-gcc.cc: Remove trailing whitespace. * gospec.cc: Likewise.
1377 lines
60 KiB
Modula-2
1377 lines
60 KiB
Modula-2
/* This file contains the definitions and documentation for the
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Register Transfer Expressions (rtx's) that make up the
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Register Transfer Language (rtl) used in the Back End of the GNU compiler.
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Copyright (C) 1987-2024 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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This file is part of GCC.
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GCC is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
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the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free
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Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option) any later
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version.
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GCC is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
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WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
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FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
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for more details.
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You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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along with GCC; see the file COPYING3. If not see
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<http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
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/* Expression definitions and descriptions for all targets are in this file.
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Some will not be used for some targets.
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The fields in the cpp macro call "DEF_RTL_EXPR()"
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are used to create declarations in the C source of the compiler.
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The fields are:
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1. The internal name of the rtx used in the C source.
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It is a tag in the enumeration "enum rtx_code" defined in "rtl.h".
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By convention these are in UPPER_CASE.
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2. The name of the rtx in the external ASCII format read by
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read_rtx(), and printed by print_rtx().
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These names are stored in rtx_name[].
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By convention these are the internal (field 1) names in lower_case.
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3. The print format, and type of each rtx->u.fld[] (field) in this rtx.
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These formats are stored in rtx_format[].
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The meaning of the formats is documented in front of this array in rtl.cc
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4. The class of the rtx. These are stored in rtx_class and are accessed
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via the GET_RTX_CLASS macro. They are defined as follows:
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RTX_CONST_OBJ
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an rtx code that can be used to represent a constant object
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(e.g, CONST_INT)
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RTX_OBJ
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an rtx code that can be used to represent an object (e.g, REG, MEM)
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RTX_COMPARE
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an rtx code for a comparison (e.g, LT, GT)
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RTX_COMM_COMPARE
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an rtx code for a commutative comparison (e.g, EQ, NE, ORDERED)
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RTX_UNARY
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an rtx code for a unary arithmetic expression (e.g, NEG, NOT)
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RTX_COMM_ARITH
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an rtx code for a commutative binary operation (e.g,, PLUS, MULT)
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RTX_TERNARY
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an rtx code for a non-bitfield three input operation (IF_THEN_ELSE)
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RTX_BIN_ARITH
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an rtx code for a non-commutative binary operation (e.g., MINUS, DIV)
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RTX_BITFIELD_OPS
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an rtx code for a bit-field operation (ZERO_EXTRACT, SIGN_EXTRACT)
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RTX_INSN
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an rtx code for a machine insn (INSN, JUMP_INSN, CALL_INSN) or
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data that will be output as assembly pseudo-ops (DEBUG_INSN)
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RTX_MATCH
|
|
an rtx code for something that matches in insns (e.g, MATCH_DUP)
|
|
RTX_AUTOINC
|
|
an rtx code for autoincrement addressing modes (e.g. POST_DEC)
|
|
RTX_EXTRA
|
|
everything else
|
|
|
|
All of the expressions that appear only in machine descriptions,
|
|
not in RTL used by the compiler itself, are at the end of the file. */
|
|
|
|
/* Unknown, or no such operation; the enumeration constant should have
|
|
value zero. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(UNKNOWN, "UnKnown", "*", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Used in the cselib routines to describe a value. Objects of this
|
|
kind are only allocated in cselib.cc, in an alloc pool instead of in
|
|
GC memory. The only operand of a VALUE is a cselib_val.
|
|
var-tracking requires this to have a distinct integral value from
|
|
DECL codes in trees. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(VALUE, "value", "0", RTX_OBJ)
|
|
|
|
/* The RTL generated for a DEBUG_EXPR_DECL. It links back to the
|
|
DEBUG_EXPR_DECL in the first operand. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEBUG_EXPR, "debug_expr", "0", RTX_OBJ)
|
|
|
|
/* ---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Expressions used in constructing lists.
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------- */
|
|
|
|
/* A linked list of expressions. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(EXPR_LIST, "expr_list", "ee", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* A linked list of instructions.
|
|
The insns are represented in print by their uids. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(INSN_LIST, "insn_list", "ue", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* A linked list of integers. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(INT_LIST, "int_list", "ie", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* SEQUENCE is used in late passes of the compiler to group insns for
|
|
one reason or another.
|
|
|
|
For example, after delay slot filling, branch instructions with filled
|
|
delay slots are represented as a SEQUENCE of length 1 + n_delay_slots,
|
|
with the branch instruction in XEXPVEC(seq, 0, 0) and the instructions
|
|
occupying the delay slots in the remaining XEXPVEC slots.
|
|
|
|
Another place where a SEQUENCE may appear, is in REG_FRAME_RELATED_EXPR
|
|
notes, to express complex operations that are not obvious from the insn
|
|
to which the REG_FRAME_RELATED_EXPR note is attached. In this usage of
|
|
SEQUENCE, the sequence vector slots do not hold real instructions but
|
|
only pseudo-instructions that can be translated to DWARF CFA expressions.
|
|
|
|
Some back ends also use SEQUENCE to group insns in bundles.
|
|
|
|
Much of the compiler infrastructure is not prepared to handle SEQUENCE
|
|
objects. Only passes after pass_free_cfg are expected to handle them. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(SEQUENCE, "sequence", "E", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Represents a non-global base address. This is only used in alias.cc. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(ADDRESS, "address", "i", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Expression types used for things in the instruction chain.
|
|
|
|
All formats must start with "uu" to handle the chain.
|
|
Each insn expression holds an rtl instruction and its semantics
|
|
during back-end processing.
|
|
See macros in "rtl.h" for the meaning of each rtx->u.fld[].
|
|
|
|
---------------------------------------------------------------------- */
|
|
|
|
/* An annotation for variable assignment tracking. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEBUG_INSN, "debug_insn", "uuBeiie", RTX_INSN)
|
|
|
|
/* An instruction that cannot jump. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(INSN, "insn", "uuBeiie", RTX_INSN)
|
|
|
|
/* An instruction that can possibly jump.
|
|
Fields ( rtx->u.fld[] ) have exact same meaning as INSN's. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(JUMP_INSN, "jump_insn", "uuBeiie0", RTX_INSN)
|
|
|
|
/* An instruction that can possibly call a subroutine
|
|
but which will not change which instruction comes next
|
|
in the current function.
|
|
Field ( rtx->u.fld[8] ) is CALL_INSN_FUNCTION_USAGE.
|
|
All other fields ( rtx->u.fld[] ) have exact same meaning as INSN's. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(CALL_INSN, "call_insn", "uuBeiiee", RTX_INSN)
|
|
|
|
/* Placeholder for tablejump JUMP_INSNs. The pattern of this kind
|
|
of rtx is always either an ADDR_VEC or an ADDR_DIFF_VEC. These
|
|
placeholders do not appear as real instructions inside a basic
|
|
block, but are considered active_insn_p instructions for historical
|
|
reasons, when jump table data was represented with JUMP_INSNs. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(JUMP_TABLE_DATA, "jump_table_data", "uuBe0000", RTX_INSN)
|
|
|
|
/* A marker that indicates that control will not flow through. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(BARRIER, "barrier", "uu00000", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Holds a label that is followed by instructions.
|
|
Operand:
|
|
3: is used in jump.cc for the use-count of the label.
|
|
4: is used in the sh backend.
|
|
5: is a number that is unique in the entire compilation.
|
|
6: is the user-given name of the label, if any. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(CODE_LABEL, "code_label", "uuB00is", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Say where in the code a source line starts, for symbol table's sake.
|
|
Operand:
|
|
3: note-specific data
|
|
4: enum insn_note
|
|
5: unique number if insn_note == note_insn_deleted_label. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(NOTE, "note", "uuB0ni", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Top level constituents of INSN, JUMP_INSN and CALL_INSN.
|
|
---------------------------------------------------------------------- */
|
|
|
|
/* Conditionally execute code.
|
|
Operand 0 is the condition that if true, the code is executed.
|
|
Operand 1 is the code to be executed (typically a SET).
|
|
|
|
Semantics are that there are no side effects if the condition
|
|
is false. This pattern is created automatically by the if_convert
|
|
pass run after reload or by target-specific splitters. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(COND_EXEC, "cond_exec", "ee", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Several operations to be done in parallel (perhaps under COND_EXEC). */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(PARALLEL, "parallel", "E", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* A string that is passed through to the assembler as input.
|
|
One can obviously pass comments through by using the
|
|
assembler comment syntax.
|
|
These occur in an insn all by themselves as the PATTERN.
|
|
They also appear inside an ASM_OPERANDS
|
|
as a convenient way to hold a string. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(ASM_INPUT, "asm_input", "si", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* An assembler instruction with operands.
|
|
1st operand is the instruction template.
|
|
2nd operand is the constraint for the output.
|
|
3rd operand is the number of the output this expression refers to.
|
|
When an insn stores more than one value, a separate ASM_OPERANDS
|
|
is made for each output; this integer distinguishes them.
|
|
4th is a vector of values of input operands.
|
|
5th is a vector of modes and constraints for the input operands.
|
|
Each element is an ASM_INPUT containing a constraint string
|
|
and whose mode indicates the mode of the input operand.
|
|
6th is a vector of labels that may be branched to by the asm.
|
|
7th is the source line number. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(ASM_OPERANDS, "asm_operands", "ssiEEEi", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* A machine-specific operation.
|
|
1st operand is a vector of operands being used by the operation so that
|
|
any needed reloads can be done.
|
|
2nd operand is a unique value saying which of a number of machine-specific
|
|
operations is to be performed.
|
|
(Note that the vector must be the first operand because of the way that
|
|
genrecog.cc record positions within an insn.)
|
|
|
|
UNSPEC can occur all by itself in a PATTERN, as a component of a PARALLEL,
|
|
or inside an expression.
|
|
UNSPEC by itself or as a component of a PARALLEL
|
|
is currently considered not deletable.
|
|
|
|
FIXME: Replace all uses of UNSPEC that appears by itself or as a component
|
|
of a PARALLEL with USE.
|
|
*/
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(UNSPEC, "unspec", "Ei", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Similar, but a volatile operation and one which may trap. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(UNSPEC_VOLATILE, "unspec_volatile", "Ei", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Table jump addresses.
|
|
---------------------------------------------------------------------- */
|
|
|
|
/* Vector of addresses, stored as full words.
|
|
Each element is a LABEL_REF to a CODE_LABEL whose address we want. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(ADDR_VEC, "addr_vec", "E", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Vector of address differences X0 - BASE, X1 - BASE, ...
|
|
First operand is BASE; the vector contains the X's.
|
|
The machine mode of this rtx says how much space to leave
|
|
for each difference and is adjusted by branch shortening if
|
|
CASE_VECTOR_SHORTEN_MODE is defined.
|
|
The third and fourth operands store the target labels with the
|
|
minimum and maximum addresses respectively.
|
|
The fifth operand stores flags for use by branch shortening.
|
|
Set at the start of shorten_branches:
|
|
min_align: the minimum alignment for any of the target labels.
|
|
base_after_vec: true iff BASE is after the ADDR_DIFF_VEC.
|
|
min_after_vec: true iff minimum addr target label is after the ADDR_DIFF_VEC.
|
|
max_after_vec: true iff maximum addr target label is after the ADDR_DIFF_VEC.
|
|
min_after_base: true iff minimum address target label is after BASE.
|
|
max_after_base: true iff maximum address target label is after BASE.
|
|
Set by the actual branch shortening process:
|
|
offset_unsigned: true iff offsets have to be treated as unsigned.
|
|
scale: scaling that is necessary to make offsets fit into the mode.
|
|
|
|
The third, fourth and fifth operands are only valid when
|
|
CASE_VECTOR_SHORTEN_MODE is defined, and only in an optimizing
|
|
compilation. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(ADDR_DIFF_VEC, "addr_diff_vec", "eEee0", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Memory prefetch, with attributes supported on some targets.
|
|
Operand 1 is the address of the memory to fetch.
|
|
Operand 2 is 1 for a write access, 0 otherwise.
|
|
Operand 3 is the level of temporal locality; 0 means there is no
|
|
temporal locality and 1, 2, and 3 are for increasing levels of temporal
|
|
locality.
|
|
|
|
The attributes specified by operands 2 and 3 are ignored for targets
|
|
whose prefetch instructions do not support them. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(PREFETCH, "prefetch", "eee", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
At the top level of an instruction (perhaps under PARALLEL).
|
|
---------------------------------------------------------------------- */
|
|
|
|
/* Assignment.
|
|
Operand 1 is the location (REG, MEM, PC or whatever) assigned to.
|
|
Operand 2 is the value stored there.
|
|
ALL assignment must use SET.
|
|
Instructions that do multiple assignments must use multiple SET,
|
|
under PARALLEL. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(SET, "set", "ee", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Indicate something is used in a way that we don't want to explain.
|
|
For example, subroutine calls will use the register
|
|
in which the static chain is passed.
|
|
|
|
USE cannot appear as an operand of other rtx except for PARALLEL.
|
|
USE is not deletable, as it indicates that the operand
|
|
is used in some unknown way. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(USE, "use", "e", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Indicate something is clobbered in a way that we don't want to explain.
|
|
For example, subroutine calls will clobber some physical registers
|
|
(the ones that are by convention not saved).
|
|
|
|
CLOBBER cannot appear as an operand of other rtx except for PARALLEL.
|
|
CLOBBER of a hard register appearing by itself (not within PARALLEL)
|
|
is considered undeletable before reload. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(CLOBBER, "clobber", "e", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Call a subroutine.
|
|
Operand 1 is the address to call.
|
|
Operand 2 is the number of arguments. */
|
|
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(CALL, "call", "ee", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Return from a subroutine. */
|
|
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(RETURN, "return", "", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Like RETURN, but truly represents only a function return, while
|
|
RETURN may represent an insn that also performs other functions
|
|
of the function epilogue. Like RETURN, this may also occur in
|
|
conditional jumps. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(SIMPLE_RETURN, "simple_return", "", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Special for EH return from subroutine. */
|
|
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(EH_RETURN, "eh_return", "", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Conditional trap.
|
|
Operand 1 is the condition.
|
|
Operand 2 is the trap code.
|
|
For an unconditional trap, make the condition (const_int 1). */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(TRAP_IF, "trap_if", "ee", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Primitive values for use in expressions.
|
|
---------------------------------------------------------------------- */
|
|
|
|
/* numeric integer constant */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(CONST_INT, "const_int", "w", RTX_CONST_OBJ)
|
|
|
|
/* numeric integer constant */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(CONST_WIDE_INT, "const_wide_int", "", RTX_CONST_OBJ)
|
|
|
|
/* An rtx representation of a poly_wide_int. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(CONST_POLY_INT, "const_poly_int", "", RTX_CONST_OBJ)
|
|
|
|
/* fixed-point constant */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(CONST_FIXED, "const_fixed", "www", RTX_CONST_OBJ)
|
|
|
|
/* numeric floating point or integer constant. If the mode is
|
|
VOIDmode it is an int otherwise it has a floating point mode and a
|
|
floating point value. Operands hold the value. They are all 'w'
|
|
and there may be from 2 to 6; see real.h. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(CONST_DOUBLE, "const_double", CONST_DOUBLE_FORMAT, RTX_CONST_OBJ)
|
|
|
|
/* Describes a vector constant. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(CONST_VECTOR, "const_vector", "E", RTX_CONST_OBJ)
|
|
|
|
/* String constant. Used for attributes in machine descriptions and
|
|
for special cases in DWARF2 debug output. NOT used for source-
|
|
language string constants. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(CONST_STRING, "const_string", "s", RTX_OBJ)
|
|
|
|
/* This is used to encapsulate an expression whose value is constant
|
|
(such as the sum of a SYMBOL_REF and a CONST_INT) so that it will be
|
|
recognized as a constant operand rather than by arithmetic instructions. */
|
|
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(CONST, "const", "e", RTX_CONST_OBJ)
|
|
|
|
/* program counter. Ordinary jumps are represented
|
|
by a SET whose first operand is (PC). */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(PC, "pc", "", RTX_OBJ)
|
|
|
|
/* A register. The "operand" is the register number, accessed with
|
|
the REGNO macro. If this number is less than FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER
|
|
then a hardware register is being referred to. The second operand
|
|
points to a reg_attrs structure.
|
|
This rtx needs to have as many (or more) fields as a MEM, since we
|
|
can change REG rtx's into MEMs during reload. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(REG, "reg", "r", RTX_OBJ)
|
|
|
|
/* A scratch register. This represents a register used only within a
|
|
single insn. It will be replaced by a REG during register allocation
|
|
or reload unless the constraint indicates that the register won't be
|
|
needed, in which case it can remain a SCRATCH. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(SCRATCH, "scratch", "", RTX_OBJ)
|
|
|
|
/* A reference to a part of another value. The first operand is the
|
|
complete value and the second is the byte offset of the selected part. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(SUBREG, "subreg", "ep", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* This one-argument rtx is used for move instructions
|
|
that are guaranteed to alter only the low part of a destination.
|
|
Thus, (SET (SUBREG:HI (REG...)) (MEM:HI ...))
|
|
has an unspecified effect on the high part of REG,
|
|
but (SET (STRICT_LOW_PART (SUBREG:HI (REG...))) (MEM:HI ...))
|
|
is guaranteed to alter only the bits of REG that are in HImode.
|
|
|
|
The actual instruction used is probably the same in both cases,
|
|
but the register constraints may be tighter when STRICT_LOW_PART
|
|
is in use. */
|
|
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(STRICT_LOW_PART, "strict_low_part", "e", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* (CONCAT a b) represents the virtual concatenation of a and b
|
|
to make a value that has as many bits as a and b put together.
|
|
This is used for complex values. Normally it appears only
|
|
in DECL_RTLs and during RTL generation, but not in the insn chain. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(CONCAT, "concat", "ee", RTX_OBJ)
|
|
|
|
/* (CONCATN [a1 a2 ... an]) represents the virtual concatenation of
|
|
all An to make a value. This is an extension of CONCAT to larger
|
|
number of components. Like CONCAT, it should not appear in the
|
|
insn chain. Every element of the CONCATN is the same size. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(CONCATN, "concatn", "E", RTX_OBJ)
|
|
|
|
/* A memory location; operand is the address. The second operand is the
|
|
alias set to which this MEM belongs. We use `0' instead of `w' for this
|
|
field so that the field need not be specified in machine descriptions. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(MEM, "mem", "e0", RTX_OBJ)
|
|
|
|
/* Reference to an assembler label in the code for this function.
|
|
The operand is a CODE_LABEL found in the insn chain. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(LABEL_REF, "label_ref", "u", RTX_CONST_OBJ)
|
|
|
|
/* Reference to a named label:
|
|
Operand 0: label name
|
|
Operand 1: tree from which this symbol is derived, or null.
|
|
This is either a DECL node, or some kind of constant. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(SYMBOL_REF, "symbol_ref", "s0", RTX_CONST_OBJ)
|
|
|
|
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Expressions for operators in an rtl pattern
|
|
---------------------------------------------------------------------- */
|
|
|
|
/* if_then_else. This is used in representing ordinary
|
|
conditional jump instructions.
|
|
Operand:
|
|
0: condition
|
|
1: then expr
|
|
2: else expr */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(IF_THEN_ELSE, "if_then_else", "eee", RTX_TERNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Comparison, produces a condition code result. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(COMPARE, "compare", "ee", RTX_BIN_ARITH)
|
|
|
|
/* plus */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(PLUS, "plus", "ee", RTX_COMM_ARITH)
|
|
|
|
/* Operand 0 minus operand 1. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(MINUS, "minus", "ee", RTX_BIN_ARITH)
|
|
|
|
/* Minus operand 0. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(NEG, "neg", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(MULT, "mult", "ee", RTX_COMM_ARITH)
|
|
|
|
/* Multiplication with signed saturation */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(SS_MULT, "ss_mult", "ee", RTX_COMM_ARITH)
|
|
/* Multiplication with unsigned saturation */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(US_MULT, "us_mult", "ee", RTX_COMM_ARITH)
|
|
|
|
/* Signed high-part multiplication. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(SMUL_HIGHPART, "smul_highpart", "ee", RTX_COMM_ARITH)
|
|
/* Unsigned high-part multiplication. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(UMUL_HIGHPART, "umul_highpart", "ee", RTX_COMM_ARITH)
|
|
|
|
/* Operand 0 divided by operand 1. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DIV, "div", "ee", RTX_BIN_ARITH)
|
|
/* Division with signed saturation */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(SS_DIV, "ss_div", "ee", RTX_BIN_ARITH)
|
|
/* Division with unsigned saturation */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(US_DIV, "us_div", "ee", RTX_BIN_ARITH)
|
|
|
|
/* Remainder of operand 0 divided by operand 1. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(MOD, "mod", "ee", RTX_BIN_ARITH)
|
|
|
|
/* Unsigned divide and remainder. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(UDIV, "udiv", "ee", RTX_BIN_ARITH)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(UMOD, "umod", "ee", RTX_BIN_ARITH)
|
|
|
|
/* Bitwise operations. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(AND, "and", "ee", RTX_COMM_ARITH)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(IOR, "ior", "ee", RTX_COMM_ARITH)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(XOR, "xor", "ee", RTX_COMM_ARITH)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(NOT, "not", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Operand:
|
|
0: value to be shifted.
|
|
1: number of bits. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(ASHIFT, "ashift", "ee", RTX_BIN_ARITH) /* shift left */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(ROTATE, "rotate", "ee", RTX_BIN_ARITH) /* rotate left */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(ASHIFTRT, "ashiftrt", "ee", RTX_BIN_ARITH) /* arithmetic shift right */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(LSHIFTRT, "lshiftrt", "ee", RTX_BIN_ARITH) /* logical shift right */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(ROTATERT, "rotatert", "ee", RTX_BIN_ARITH) /* rotate right */
|
|
|
|
/* Minimum and maximum values of two operands. We need both signed and
|
|
unsigned forms. (We cannot use MIN for SMIN because it conflicts
|
|
with a macro of the same name.) The signed variants should be used
|
|
with floating point. Further, if both operands are zeros, or if either
|
|
operand is NaN, then it is unspecified which of the two operands is
|
|
returned as the result. */
|
|
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(SMIN, "smin", "ee", RTX_COMM_ARITH)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(SMAX, "smax", "ee", RTX_COMM_ARITH)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(UMIN, "umin", "ee", RTX_COMM_ARITH)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(UMAX, "umax", "ee", RTX_COMM_ARITH)
|
|
|
|
/* These unary operations are used to represent incrementation
|
|
and decrementation as they occur in memory addresses.
|
|
The amount of increment or decrement are not represented
|
|
because they can be understood from the machine-mode of the
|
|
containing MEM. These operations exist in only two cases:
|
|
1. pushes onto the stack.
|
|
2. created automatically by the auto-inc-dec pass. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(PRE_DEC, "pre_dec", "e", RTX_AUTOINC)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(PRE_INC, "pre_inc", "e", RTX_AUTOINC)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(POST_DEC, "post_dec", "e", RTX_AUTOINC)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(POST_INC, "post_inc", "e", RTX_AUTOINC)
|
|
|
|
/* These binary operations are used to represent generic address
|
|
side-effects in memory addresses, except for simple incrementation
|
|
or decrementation which use the above operations. They are
|
|
created automatically by the life_analysis pass in flow.c.
|
|
The first operand is a REG which is used as the address.
|
|
The second operand is an expression that is assigned to the
|
|
register, either before (PRE_MODIFY) or after (POST_MODIFY)
|
|
evaluating the address.
|
|
Currently, the compiler can only handle second operands of the
|
|
form (plus (reg) (reg)) and (plus (reg) (const_int)), where
|
|
the first operand of the PLUS has to be the same register as
|
|
the first operand of the *_MODIFY. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(PRE_MODIFY, "pre_modify", "ee", RTX_AUTOINC)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(POST_MODIFY, "post_modify", "ee", RTX_AUTOINC)
|
|
|
|
/* Comparison operations. The first 6 are allowed only for integral,
|
|
floating-point and vector modes. LTGT is only allowed for floating-point
|
|
modes. The last 4 are allowed only for integral and vector modes.
|
|
For floating-point operations, if either operand is a NaN, then NE returns
|
|
true and the remaining operations return false. The operations other than
|
|
EQ and NE may generate an exception on quiet NaNs. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(NE, "ne", "ee", RTX_COMM_COMPARE)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(EQ, "eq", "ee", RTX_COMM_COMPARE)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(GE, "ge", "ee", RTX_COMPARE)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(GT, "gt", "ee", RTX_COMPARE)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(LE, "le", "ee", RTX_COMPARE)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(LT, "lt", "ee", RTX_COMPARE)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(LTGT, "ltgt", "ee", RTX_COMM_COMPARE)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(GEU, "geu", "ee", RTX_COMPARE)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(GTU, "gtu", "ee", RTX_COMPARE)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(LEU, "leu", "ee", RTX_COMPARE)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(LTU, "ltu", "ee", RTX_COMPARE)
|
|
|
|
/* Additional floating-point unordered comparison flavors. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(UNORDERED, "unordered", "ee", RTX_COMM_COMPARE)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(ORDERED, "ordered", "ee", RTX_COMM_COMPARE)
|
|
|
|
/* These are equivalent to unordered or ... */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(UNEQ, "uneq", "ee", RTX_COMM_COMPARE)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(UNGE, "unge", "ee", RTX_COMPARE)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(UNGT, "ungt", "ee", RTX_COMPARE)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(UNLE, "unle", "ee", RTX_COMPARE)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(UNLT, "unlt", "ee", RTX_COMPARE)
|
|
|
|
/* Represents the result of sign-extending the sole operand.
|
|
The machine modes of the operand and of the SIGN_EXTEND expression
|
|
determine how much sign-extension is going on. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(SIGN_EXTEND, "sign_extend", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Similar for zero-extension (such as unsigned short to int). */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(ZERO_EXTEND, "zero_extend", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Similar but here the operand has a wider mode. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(TRUNCATE, "truncate", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Similar for extending floating-point values (such as SFmode to DFmode). */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(FLOAT_EXTEND, "float_extend", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(FLOAT_TRUNCATE, "float_truncate", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Conversion of fixed point operand to floating point value. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(FLOAT, "float", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* With fixed-point machine mode:
|
|
Conversion of floating point operand to fixed point value.
|
|
Value is defined only when the operand's value is an integer.
|
|
With floating-point machine mode (and operand with same mode):
|
|
Operand is rounded toward zero to produce an integer value
|
|
represented in floating point. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(FIX, "fix", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Conversion of unsigned fixed point operand to floating point value. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(UNSIGNED_FLOAT, "unsigned_float", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* With fixed-point machine mode:
|
|
Conversion of floating point operand to *unsigned* fixed point value.
|
|
Value is defined only when the operand's value is an integer. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(UNSIGNED_FIX, "unsigned_fix", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Conversions involving fractional fixed-point types without saturation,
|
|
including:
|
|
fractional to fractional (of different precision),
|
|
signed integer to fractional,
|
|
fractional to signed integer,
|
|
floating point to fractional,
|
|
fractional to floating point.
|
|
NOTE: fractional can be either signed or unsigned for conversions. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(FRACT_CONVERT, "fract_convert", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Conversions involving fractional fixed-point types and unsigned integer
|
|
without saturation, including:
|
|
unsigned integer to fractional,
|
|
fractional to unsigned integer.
|
|
NOTE: fractional can be either signed or unsigned for conversions. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(UNSIGNED_FRACT_CONVERT, "unsigned_fract_convert", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Conversions involving fractional fixed-point types with saturation,
|
|
including:
|
|
fractional to fractional (of different precision),
|
|
signed integer to fractional,
|
|
floating point to fractional.
|
|
NOTE: fractional can be either signed or unsigned for conversions. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(SAT_FRACT, "sat_fract", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Conversions involving fractional fixed-point types and unsigned integer
|
|
with saturation, including:
|
|
unsigned integer to fractional.
|
|
NOTE: fractional can be either signed or unsigned for conversions. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(UNSIGNED_SAT_FRACT, "unsigned_sat_fract", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Absolute value */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(ABS, "abs", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Square root */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(SQRT, "sqrt", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Swap bytes. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(BSWAP, "bswap", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Find first bit that is set.
|
|
Value is 1 + number of trailing zeros in the arg.,
|
|
or 0 if arg is 0. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(FFS, "ffs", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Count number of leading redundant sign bits (number of leading
|
|
sign bits minus one). */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(CLRSB, "clrsb", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Count leading zeros. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(CLZ, "clz", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Count trailing zeros. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(CTZ, "ctz", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Population count (number of 1 bits). */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(POPCOUNT, "popcount", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Population parity (number of 1 bits modulo 2). */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(PARITY, "parity", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Reverse bits. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(BITREVERSE, "bitreverse", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Reference to a signed bit-field of specified size and position.
|
|
Operand 0 is the memory unit (usually SImode or QImode) which
|
|
contains the field's first bit. Operand 1 is the width, in bits.
|
|
Operand 2 is the number of bits in the memory unit before the
|
|
first bit of this field.
|
|
If BITS_BIG_ENDIAN is defined, the first bit is the msb and
|
|
operand 2 counts from the msb of the memory unit.
|
|
Otherwise, the first bit is the lsb and operand 2 counts from
|
|
the lsb of the memory unit.
|
|
This kind of expression cannot appear as an lvalue in RTL. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(SIGN_EXTRACT, "sign_extract", "eee", RTX_BITFIELD_OPS)
|
|
|
|
/* Similar for unsigned bit-field.
|
|
But note! This kind of expression _can_ appear as an lvalue. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(ZERO_EXTRACT, "zero_extract", "eee", RTX_BITFIELD_OPS)
|
|
|
|
/* For RISC machines. These save memory when splitting insns. */
|
|
|
|
/* HIGH are the high-order bits of a constant expression. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(HIGH, "high", "e", RTX_CONST_OBJ)
|
|
|
|
/* LO_SUM is the sum of a register and the low-order bits
|
|
of a constant expression. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(LO_SUM, "lo_sum", "ee", RTX_OBJ)
|
|
|
|
/* Describes a merge operation between two vector values.
|
|
Operands 0 and 1 are the vectors to be merged, operand 2 is a bitmask
|
|
that specifies where the parts of the result are taken from. Set bits
|
|
indicate operand 0, clear bits indicate operand 1. The parts are defined
|
|
by the mode of the vectors. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(VEC_MERGE, "vec_merge", "eee", RTX_TERNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Describes an operation that selects parts of a vector.
|
|
Operands 0 is the source vector, operand 1 is a PARALLEL that contains
|
|
a CONST_INT for each of the subparts of the result vector, giving the
|
|
number of the source subpart that should be stored into it. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(VEC_SELECT, "vec_select", "ee", RTX_BIN_ARITH)
|
|
|
|
/* Describes a vector concat operation. Operands 0 and 1 are the source
|
|
vectors, the result is a vector that is as long as operands 0 and 1
|
|
combined and is the concatenation of the two source vectors. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(VEC_CONCAT, "vec_concat", "ee", RTX_BIN_ARITH)
|
|
|
|
/* Describes an operation that converts a small vector into a larger one by
|
|
duplicating the input values. The output vector mode must have the same
|
|
submodes as the input vector mode, and the number of output parts must be
|
|
an integer multiple of the number of input parts. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(VEC_DUPLICATE, "vec_duplicate", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Creation of a vector in which element I has the value BASE + I * STEP,
|
|
where BASE is the first operand and STEP is the second. The result
|
|
must have a vector integer mode. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(VEC_SERIES, "vec_series", "ee", RTX_BIN_ARITH)
|
|
|
|
/* Addition with signed saturation */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(SS_PLUS, "ss_plus", "ee", RTX_COMM_ARITH)
|
|
|
|
/* Addition with unsigned saturation */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(US_PLUS, "us_plus", "ee", RTX_COMM_ARITH)
|
|
|
|
/* Operand 0 minus operand 1, with signed saturation. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(SS_MINUS, "ss_minus", "ee", RTX_BIN_ARITH)
|
|
|
|
/* Negation with signed saturation. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(SS_NEG, "ss_neg", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
/* Negation with unsigned saturation. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(US_NEG, "us_neg", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Absolute value with signed saturation. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(SS_ABS, "ss_abs", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Shift left with signed saturation. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(SS_ASHIFT, "ss_ashift", "ee", RTX_BIN_ARITH)
|
|
|
|
/* Shift left with unsigned saturation. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(US_ASHIFT, "us_ashift", "ee", RTX_BIN_ARITH)
|
|
|
|
/* Operand 0 minus operand 1, with unsigned saturation. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(US_MINUS, "us_minus", "ee", RTX_BIN_ARITH)
|
|
|
|
/* Signed saturating truncate. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(SS_TRUNCATE, "ss_truncate", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Unsigned saturating truncate. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(US_TRUNCATE, "us_truncate", "e", RTX_UNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Floating point multiply/add combined instruction. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(FMA, "fma", "eee", RTX_TERNARY)
|
|
|
|
/* Floating point copysign. Operand 0 with the sign of operand 1. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(COPYSIGN, "copysign", "ee", RTX_BIN_ARITH)
|
|
|
|
/* Information about the variable and its location. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(VAR_LOCATION, "var_location", "te", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Used in VAR_LOCATION for a pointer to a decl that is no longer
|
|
addressable. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEBUG_IMPLICIT_PTR, "debug_implicit_ptr", "t", RTX_OBJ)
|
|
|
|
/* Represents value that argument had on function entry. The
|
|
single argument is the DECL_INCOMING_RTL of the corresponding
|
|
parameter. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(ENTRY_VALUE, "entry_value", "0", RTX_OBJ)
|
|
|
|
/* Used in VAR_LOCATION for a reference to a parameter that has
|
|
been optimized away completely. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEBUG_PARAMETER_REF, "debug_parameter_ref", "t", RTX_OBJ)
|
|
|
|
/* Used in marker DEBUG_INSNs to avoid being recognized as an insn. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEBUG_MARKER, "debug_marker", "", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* All expressions from this point forward appear only in machine
|
|
descriptions. */
|
|
#ifdef GENERATOR_FILE
|
|
|
|
/* Pattern-matching operators: */
|
|
|
|
/* Use the function named by the second arg (the string)
|
|
as a predicate; if matched, store the structure that was matched
|
|
in the operand table at index specified by the first arg (the integer).
|
|
If the second arg is the null string, the structure is just stored.
|
|
|
|
A third string argument indicates to the register allocator restrictions
|
|
on where the operand can be allocated.
|
|
|
|
If the target needs no restriction on any instruction this field should
|
|
be the null string.
|
|
|
|
The string is prepended by:
|
|
'=' to indicate the operand is only written to.
|
|
'+' to indicate the operand is both read and written to.
|
|
|
|
Each character in the string represents an allocable class for an operand.
|
|
'g' indicates the operand can be any valid class.
|
|
'i' indicates the operand can be immediate (in the instruction) data.
|
|
'r' indicates the operand can be in a register.
|
|
'm' indicates the operand can be in memory.
|
|
'o' a subset of the 'm' class. Those memory addressing modes that
|
|
can be offset at compile time (have a constant added to them).
|
|
|
|
Other characters indicate target dependent operand classes and
|
|
are described in each target's machine description.
|
|
|
|
For instructions with more than one operand, sets of classes can be
|
|
separated by a comma to indicate the appropriate multi-operand constraints.
|
|
There must be a 1 to 1 correspondence between these sets of classes in
|
|
all operands for an instruction.
|
|
*/
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(MATCH_OPERAND, "match_operand", "iss", RTX_MATCH)
|
|
|
|
/* Match a SCRATCH or a register. When used to generate rtl, a
|
|
SCRATCH is generated. As for MATCH_OPERAND, the mode specifies
|
|
the desired mode and the first argument is the operand number.
|
|
The second argument is the constraint. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(MATCH_SCRATCH, "match_scratch", "is", RTX_MATCH)
|
|
|
|
/* Apply a predicate, AND match recursively the operands of the rtx.
|
|
Operand 0 is the operand-number, as in match_operand.
|
|
Operand 1 is a predicate to apply (as a string, a function name).
|
|
Operand 2 is a vector of expressions, each of which must match
|
|
one subexpression of the rtx this construct is matching. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(MATCH_OPERATOR, "match_operator", "isE", RTX_MATCH)
|
|
|
|
/* Match a PARALLEL of arbitrary length. The predicate is applied
|
|
to the PARALLEL and the initial expressions in the PARALLEL are matched.
|
|
Operand 0 is the operand-number, as in match_operand.
|
|
Operand 1 is a predicate to apply to the PARALLEL.
|
|
Operand 2 is a vector of expressions, each of which must match the
|
|
corresponding element in the PARALLEL. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(MATCH_PARALLEL, "match_parallel", "isE", RTX_MATCH)
|
|
|
|
/* Match only something equal to what is stored in the operand table
|
|
at the index specified by the argument. Use with MATCH_OPERAND. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(MATCH_DUP, "match_dup", "i", RTX_MATCH)
|
|
|
|
/* Match only something equal to what is stored in the operand table
|
|
at the index specified by the argument. Use with MATCH_OPERATOR. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(MATCH_OP_DUP, "match_op_dup", "iE", RTX_MATCH)
|
|
|
|
/* Match only something equal to what is stored in the operand table
|
|
at the index specified by the argument. Use with MATCH_PARALLEL. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(MATCH_PAR_DUP, "match_par_dup", "iE", RTX_MATCH)
|
|
|
|
/* Appears only in define_predicate/define_special_predicate
|
|
expressions. Evaluates true only if the operand has an RTX code
|
|
from the set given by the argument (a comma-separated list). If the
|
|
second argument is present and nonempty, it is a sequence of digits
|
|
and/or letters which indicates the subexpression to test, using the
|
|
same syntax as genextract/genrecog's location strings: 0-9 for
|
|
XEXP (op, n), a-z for XVECEXP (op, 0, n); each character applies to
|
|
the result of the one before it. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(MATCH_CODE, "match_code", "ss", RTX_MATCH)
|
|
|
|
/* Used to inject a C conditional expression into an .md file. It can
|
|
appear in a predicate definition or an attribute expression. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(MATCH_TEST, "match_test", "s", RTX_MATCH)
|
|
|
|
/* Insn (and related) definitions. */
|
|
|
|
/* Definition of the pattern for one kind of instruction.
|
|
Operand:
|
|
0: names this instruction.
|
|
If the name is the null string, the instruction is in the
|
|
machine description just to be recognized, and will never be emitted by
|
|
the tree to rtl expander.
|
|
1: is the pattern.
|
|
2: is a string which is a C expression
|
|
giving an additional condition for recognizing this pattern.
|
|
A null string means no extra condition.
|
|
3: is the action to execute if this pattern is matched.
|
|
If this assembler code template starts with a * then it is a fragment of
|
|
C code to run to decide on a template to use. Otherwise, it is the
|
|
template to use.
|
|
4: optionally, a vector of attributes for this insn.
|
|
*/
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_INSN, "define_insn", "sEsTV", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Definition of a peephole optimization.
|
|
1st operand: vector of insn patterns to match
|
|
2nd operand: C expression that must be true
|
|
3rd operand: template or C code to produce assembler output.
|
|
4: optionally, a vector of attributes for this insn.
|
|
|
|
This form is deprecated; use define_peephole2 instead. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_PEEPHOLE, "define_peephole", "EsTV", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Definition of a split operation.
|
|
1st operand: insn pattern to match
|
|
2nd operand: C expression that must be true
|
|
3rd operand: vector of insn patterns to place into a SEQUENCE
|
|
4th operand: optionally, some C code to execute before generating the
|
|
insns. This might, for example, create some RTX's and store them in
|
|
elements of `recog_data.operand' for use by the vector of
|
|
insn-patterns.
|
|
(`operands' is an alias here for `recog_data.operand'). */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_SPLIT, "define_split", "EsES", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Definition of an insn and associated split.
|
|
This is the concatenation, with a few modifications, of a define_insn
|
|
and a define_split which share the same pattern.
|
|
Operand:
|
|
0: names this instruction.
|
|
If the name is the null string, the instruction is in the
|
|
machine description just to be recognized, and will never be emitted by
|
|
the tree to rtl expander.
|
|
1: is the pattern.
|
|
2: is a string which is a C expression
|
|
giving an additional condition for recognizing this pattern.
|
|
A null string means no extra condition.
|
|
3: is the action to execute if this pattern is matched.
|
|
If this assembler code template starts with a * then it is a fragment of
|
|
C code to run to decide on a template to use. Otherwise, it is the
|
|
template to use.
|
|
4: C expression that must be true for split. This may start with "&&"
|
|
in which case the split condition is the logical and of the insn
|
|
condition and what follows the "&&" of this operand.
|
|
5: vector of insn patterns to place into a SEQUENCE
|
|
6: optionally, some C code to execute before generating the
|
|
insns. This might, for example, create some RTX's and store them in
|
|
elements of `recog_data.operand' for use by the vector of
|
|
insn-patterns.
|
|
(`operands' is an alias here for `recog_data.operand').
|
|
7: optionally, a vector of attributes for this insn. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_INSN_AND_SPLIT, "define_insn_and_split", "sEsTsESV", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* A form of define_insn_and_split in which the split insn pattern (operand 5)
|
|
is determined automatically by replacing match_operands with match_dups
|
|
and match_operators with match_op_dups. The operands are the same as
|
|
define_insn_and_split but with operand 5 removed. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_INSN_AND_REWRITE, "define_insn_and_rewrite", "sEsTsSV", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Definition of an RTL peephole operation.
|
|
Follows the same arguments as define_split. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_PEEPHOLE2, "define_peephole2", "EsES", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Define how to generate multiple insns for a standard insn name.
|
|
1st operand: the insn name.
|
|
2nd operand: vector of insn-patterns.
|
|
Use match_operand to substitute an element of `recog_data.operand'.
|
|
3rd operand: C expression that must be true for this to be available.
|
|
This may not test any operands.
|
|
4th operand: Extra C code to execute before generating the insns.
|
|
This might, for example, create some RTX's and store them in
|
|
elements of `recog_data.operand' for use by the vector of
|
|
insn-patterns.
|
|
(`operands' is an alias here for `recog_data.operand').
|
|
5th: optionally, a vector of attributes for this expand. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_EXPAND, "define_expand", "sEssV", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Define a requirement for delay slots.
|
|
1st operand: Condition involving insn attributes that, if true,
|
|
indicates that the insn requires the number of delay slots
|
|
shown.
|
|
2nd operand: Vector whose length is the three times the number of delay
|
|
slots required.
|
|
Each entry gives three conditions, each involving attributes.
|
|
The first must be true for an insn to occupy that delay slot
|
|
location. The second is true for all insns that can be
|
|
annulled if the branch is true and the third is true for all
|
|
insns that can be annulled if the branch is false.
|
|
|
|
Multiple DEFINE_DELAYs may be present. They indicate differing
|
|
requirements for delay slots. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_DELAY, "define_delay", "eE", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Define attribute computation for `asm' instructions. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_ASM_ATTRIBUTES, "define_asm_attributes", "V", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Definition of a conditional execution meta operation. Automatically
|
|
generates new instances of DEFINE_INSN, selected by having attribute
|
|
"predicable" true. The new pattern will contain a COND_EXEC and the
|
|
predicate at top-level.
|
|
|
|
Operand:
|
|
0: The predicate pattern. The top-level form should match a
|
|
relational operator. Operands should have only one alternative.
|
|
1: A C expression giving an additional condition for recognizing
|
|
the generated pattern.
|
|
2: A template or C code to produce assembler output.
|
|
3: A vector of attributes to append to the resulting cond_exec insn. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_COND_EXEC, "define_cond_exec", "EssV", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Definition of an operand predicate. The difference between
|
|
DEFINE_PREDICATE and DEFINE_SPECIAL_PREDICATE is that genrecog will
|
|
not warn about a match_operand with no mode if it has a predicate
|
|
defined with DEFINE_SPECIAL_PREDICATE.
|
|
|
|
Operand:
|
|
0: The name of the predicate.
|
|
1: A boolean expression which computes whether or not the predicate
|
|
matches. This expression can use IOR, AND, NOT, MATCH_OPERAND,
|
|
MATCH_CODE, and MATCH_TEST. It must be specific enough that genrecog
|
|
can calculate the set of RTX codes that can possibly match.
|
|
2: A C function body which must return true for the predicate to match.
|
|
Optional. Use this when the test is too complicated to fit into a
|
|
match_test expression. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_PREDICATE, "define_predicate", "ses", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_SPECIAL_PREDICATE, "define_special_predicate", "ses", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Definition of a register operand constraint. This simply maps the
|
|
constraint string to a register class.
|
|
|
|
Operand:
|
|
0: The name of the constraint (often, but not always, a single letter).
|
|
1: A C expression which evaluates to the appropriate register class for
|
|
this constraint. If this is not just a constant, it should look only
|
|
at -m switches and the like.
|
|
2: A docstring for this constraint, in Texinfo syntax; not currently
|
|
used, in future will be incorporated into the manual's list of
|
|
machine-specific operand constraints.
|
|
3: A C expression that evalutes to true if "regno" is a valid
|
|
start register. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_REGISTER_CONSTRAINT, "define_register_constraint", "sssS", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Definition of a non-register operand constraint. These look at the
|
|
operand and decide whether it fits the constraint.
|
|
|
|
DEFINE_CONSTRAINT gets no special treatment if it fails to match.
|
|
It is appropriate for constant-only constraints, and most others.
|
|
|
|
DEFINE_MEMORY_CONSTRAINT tells reload that this constraint can be made
|
|
to match, if it doesn't already, by converting the operand to the form
|
|
(mem (reg X)) where X is a base register. It is suitable for constraints
|
|
that describe a subset of all memory references.
|
|
|
|
DEFINE_ADDRESS_CONSTRAINT tells reload that this constraint can be made
|
|
to match, if it doesn't already, by converting the operand to the form
|
|
(reg X) where X is a base register. It is suitable for constraints that
|
|
describe a subset of all address references.
|
|
|
|
When in doubt, use plain DEFINE_CONSTRAINT.
|
|
|
|
Operand:
|
|
0: The name of the constraint (often, but not always, a single letter).
|
|
1: A docstring for this constraint, in Texinfo syntax; not currently
|
|
used, in future will be incorporated into the manual's list of
|
|
machine-specific operand constraints.
|
|
2: A boolean expression which computes whether or not the constraint
|
|
matches. It should follow the same rules as a define_predicate
|
|
expression, including the bit about specifying the set of RTX codes
|
|
that could possibly match. MATCH_TEST subexpressions may make use of
|
|
these variables:
|
|
`op' - the RTL object defining the operand.
|
|
`mode' - the mode of `op'.
|
|
`ival' - INTVAL(op), if op is a CONST_INT.
|
|
`hval' - CONST_DOUBLE_HIGH(op), if op is an integer CONST_DOUBLE.
|
|
`lval' - CONST_DOUBLE_LOW(op), if op is an integer CONST_DOUBLE.
|
|
`rval' - CONST_DOUBLE_REAL_VALUE(op), if op is a floating-point
|
|
CONST_DOUBLE.
|
|
Do not use ival/hval/lval/rval if op is not the appropriate kind of
|
|
RTL object. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_CONSTRAINT, "define_constraint", "sse", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_MEMORY_CONSTRAINT, "define_memory_constraint", "sse", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_SPECIAL_MEMORY_CONSTRAINT, "define_special_memory_constraint", "sse", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_RELAXED_MEMORY_CONSTRAINT, "define_relaxed_memory_constraint", "sse", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_ADDRESS_CONSTRAINT, "define_address_constraint", "sse", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* Constructions for CPU pipeline description described by NDFAs. */
|
|
|
|
/* (define_cpu_unit string [string]) describes cpu functional
|
|
units (separated by comma).
|
|
|
|
1st operand: Names of cpu functional units.
|
|
2nd operand: Name of automaton (see comments for DEFINE_AUTOMATON).
|
|
|
|
All define_reservations, define_cpu_units, and
|
|
define_query_cpu_units should have unique names which may not be
|
|
"nothing". */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_CPU_UNIT, "define_cpu_unit", "sS", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* (define_query_cpu_unit string [string]) describes cpu functional
|
|
units analogously to define_cpu_unit. The reservation of such
|
|
units can be queried for automaton state. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_QUERY_CPU_UNIT, "define_query_cpu_unit", "sS", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* (exclusion_set string string) means that each CPU functional unit
|
|
in the first string cannot be reserved simultaneously with any
|
|
unit whose name is in the second string and vise versa. CPU units
|
|
in the string are separated by commas. For example, it is useful
|
|
for description CPU with fully pipelined floating point functional
|
|
unit which can execute simultaneously only single floating point
|
|
insns or only double floating point insns. All CPU functional
|
|
units in a set should belong to the same automaton. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(EXCLUSION_SET, "exclusion_set", "ss", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* (presence_set string string) means that each CPU functional unit in
|
|
the first string cannot be reserved unless at least one of pattern
|
|
of units whose names are in the second string is reserved. This is
|
|
an asymmetric relation. CPU units or unit patterns in the strings
|
|
are separated by commas. Pattern is one unit name or unit names
|
|
separated by white-spaces.
|
|
|
|
For example, it is useful for description that slot1 is reserved
|
|
after slot0 reservation for a VLIW processor. We could describe it
|
|
by the following construction
|
|
|
|
(presence_set "slot1" "slot0")
|
|
|
|
Or slot1 is reserved only after slot0 and unit b0 reservation. In
|
|
this case we could write
|
|
|
|
(presence_set "slot1" "slot0 b0")
|
|
|
|
All CPU functional units in a set should belong to the same
|
|
automaton. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(PRESENCE_SET, "presence_set", "ss", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* (final_presence_set string string) is analogous to `presence_set'.
|
|
The difference between them is when checking is done. When an
|
|
instruction is issued in given automaton state reflecting all
|
|
current and planned unit reservations, the automaton state is
|
|
changed. The first state is a source state, the second one is a
|
|
result state. Checking for `presence_set' is done on the source
|
|
state reservation, checking for `final_presence_set' is done on the
|
|
result reservation. This construction is useful to describe a
|
|
reservation which is actually two subsequent reservations. For
|
|
example, if we use
|
|
|
|
(presence_set "slot1" "slot0")
|
|
|
|
the following insn will be never issued (because slot1 requires
|
|
slot0 which is absent in the source state).
|
|
|
|
(define_reservation "insn_and_nop" "slot0 + slot1")
|
|
|
|
but it can be issued if we use analogous `final_presence_set'. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(FINAL_PRESENCE_SET, "final_presence_set", "ss", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* (absence_set string string) means that each CPU functional unit in
|
|
the first string can be reserved only if each pattern of units
|
|
whose names are in the second string is not reserved. This is an
|
|
asymmetric relation (actually exclusion set is analogous to this
|
|
one but it is symmetric). CPU units or unit patterns in the string
|
|
are separated by commas. Pattern is one unit name or unit names
|
|
separated by white-spaces.
|
|
|
|
For example, it is useful for description that slot0 cannot be
|
|
reserved after slot1 or slot2 reservation for a VLIW processor. We
|
|
could describe it by the following construction
|
|
|
|
(absence_set "slot2" "slot0, slot1")
|
|
|
|
Or slot2 cannot be reserved if slot0 and unit b0 are reserved or
|
|
slot1 and unit b1 are reserved . In this case we could write
|
|
|
|
(absence_set "slot2" "slot0 b0, slot1 b1")
|
|
|
|
All CPU functional units in a set should to belong the same
|
|
automaton. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(ABSENCE_SET, "absence_set", "ss", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* (final_absence_set string string) is analogous to `absence_set' but
|
|
checking is done on the result (state) reservation. See comments
|
|
for `final_presence_set'. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(FINAL_ABSENCE_SET, "final_absence_set", "ss", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* (define_bypass number out_insn_names in_insn_names) names bypass
|
|
with given latency (the first number) from insns given by the first
|
|
string (see define_insn_reservation) into insns given by the second
|
|
string. Insn names in the strings are separated by commas. The
|
|
third operand is optional name of function which is additional
|
|
guard for the bypass. The function will get the two insns as
|
|
parameters. If the function returns zero the bypass will be
|
|
ignored for this case. Additional guard is necessary to recognize
|
|
complicated bypasses, e.g. when consumer is load address. If there
|
|
are more one bypass with the same output and input insns, the
|
|
chosen bypass is the first bypass with a guard in description whose
|
|
guard function returns nonzero. If there is no such bypass, then
|
|
bypass without the guard function is chosen. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_BYPASS, "define_bypass", "issS", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* (define_automaton string) describes names of automata generated and
|
|
used for pipeline hazards recognition. The names are separated by
|
|
comma. Actually it is possibly to generate the single automaton
|
|
but unfortunately it can be very large. If we use more one
|
|
automata, the summary size of the automata usually is less than the
|
|
single one. The automaton name is used in define_cpu_unit and
|
|
define_query_cpu_unit. All automata should have unique names. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_AUTOMATON, "define_automaton", "s", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* (automata_option string) describes option for generation of
|
|
automata. Currently there are the following options:
|
|
|
|
o "no-minimization" which makes no minimization of automata. This
|
|
is only worth to do when we are debugging the description and
|
|
need to look more accurately at reservations of states.
|
|
|
|
o "time" which means printing additional time statistics about
|
|
generation of automata.
|
|
|
|
o "v" which means generation of file describing the result
|
|
automata. The file has suffix `.dfa' and can be used for the
|
|
description verification and debugging.
|
|
|
|
o "w" which means generation of warning instead of error for
|
|
non-critical errors.
|
|
|
|
o "ndfa" which makes nondeterministic finite state automata.
|
|
|
|
o "progress" which means output of a progress bar showing how many
|
|
states were generated so far for automaton being processed. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(AUTOMATA_OPTION, "automata_option", "s", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* (define_reservation string string) names reservation (the first
|
|
string) of cpu functional units (the 2nd string). Sometimes unit
|
|
reservations for different insns contain common parts. In such
|
|
case, you can describe common part and use its name (the 1st
|
|
parameter) in regular expression in define_insn_reservation. All
|
|
define_reservations, define_cpu_units, and define_query_cpu_units
|
|
should have unique names which may not be "nothing". */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_RESERVATION, "define_reservation", "ss", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* (define_insn_reservation name default_latency condition regexpr)
|
|
describes reservation of cpu functional units (the 3nd operand) for
|
|
instruction which is selected by the condition (the 2nd parameter).
|
|
The first parameter is used for output of debugging information.
|
|
The reservations are described by a regular expression according
|
|
the following syntax:
|
|
|
|
regexp = regexp "," oneof
|
|
| oneof
|
|
|
|
oneof = oneof "|" allof
|
|
| allof
|
|
|
|
allof = allof "+" repeat
|
|
| repeat
|
|
|
|
repeat = element "*" number
|
|
| element
|
|
|
|
element = cpu_function_unit_name
|
|
| reservation_name
|
|
| result_name
|
|
| "nothing"
|
|
| "(" regexp ")"
|
|
|
|
1. "," is used for describing start of the next cycle in
|
|
reservation.
|
|
|
|
2. "|" is used for describing the reservation described by the
|
|
first regular expression *or* the reservation described by the
|
|
second regular expression *or* etc.
|
|
|
|
3. "+" is used for describing the reservation described by the
|
|
first regular expression *and* the reservation described by the
|
|
second regular expression *and* etc.
|
|
|
|
4. "*" is used for convenience and simply means sequence in
|
|
which the regular expression are repeated NUMBER times with
|
|
cycle advancing (see ",").
|
|
|
|
5. cpu functional unit name which means its reservation.
|
|
|
|
6. reservation name -- see define_reservation.
|
|
|
|
7. string "nothing" means no units reservation. */
|
|
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_INSN_RESERVATION, "define_insn_reservation", "sies", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Expressions used for insn attributes. */
|
|
|
|
/* Definition of an insn attribute.
|
|
1st operand: name of the attribute
|
|
2nd operand: comma-separated list of possible attribute values
|
|
3rd operand: expression for the default value of the attribute. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_ATTR, "define_attr", "sse", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Definition of an insn attribute that uses an existing enumerated type.
|
|
1st operand: name of the attribute
|
|
2nd operand: the name of the enumerated type
|
|
3rd operand: expression for the default value of the attribute. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_ENUM_ATTR, "define_enum_attr", "sse", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Marker for the name of an attribute. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(ATTR, "attr", "s", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* For use in the last (optional) operand of DEFINE_INSN or DEFINE_PEEPHOLE and
|
|
in DEFINE_ASM_INSN to specify an attribute to assign to insns matching that
|
|
pattern.
|
|
|
|
(set_attr "name" "value") is equivalent to
|
|
(set (attr "name") (const_string "value")) */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(SET_ATTR, "set_attr", "ss", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* In the last operand of DEFINE_INSN and DEFINE_PEEPHOLE, this can be used to
|
|
specify that attribute values are to be assigned according to the
|
|
alternative matched.
|
|
|
|
The following three expressions are equivalent:
|
|
|
|
(set (attr "att") (cond [(eq_attrq "alternative" "1") (const_string "a1")
|
|
(eq_attrq "alternative" "2") (const_string "a2")]
|
|
(const_string "a3")))
|
|
(set_attr_alternative "att" [(const_string "a1") (const_string "a2")
|
|
(const_string "a3")])
|
|
(set_attr "att" "a1,a2,a3")
|
|
*/
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(SET_ATTR_ALTERNATIVE, "set_attr_alternative", "sE", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
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/* A conditional expression true if the value of the specified attribute of
|
|
the current insn equals the specified value. The first operand is the
|
|
attribute name and the second is the comparison value. */
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DEF_RTL_EXPR(EQ_ATTR, "eq_attr", "ss", RTX_EXTRA)
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/* A special case of the above representing a set of alternatives. The first
|
|
operand is bitmap of the set, the second one is the default value. */
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DEF_RTL_EXPR(EQ_ATTR_ALT, "eq_attr_alt", "ww", RTX_EXTRA)
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|
|
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/* A conditional expression which is true if the specified flag is
|
|
true for the insn being scheduled in reorg.
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|
|
|
genattr.cc defines the following flags which can be tested by
|
|
(attr_flag "foo") expressions in eligible_for_delay: forward, backward. */
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|
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|
DEF_RTL_EXPR (ATTR_FLAG, "attr_flag", "s", RTX_EXTRA)
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|
|
|
/* General conditional. The first operand is a vector composed of pairs of
|
|
expressions. The first element of each pair is evaluated, in turn.
|
|
The value of the conditional is the second expression of the first pair
|
|
whose first expression evaluates nonzero. If none of the expressions is
|
|
true, the second operand will be used as the value of the conditional. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(COND, "cond", "Ee", RTX_EXTRA)
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|
|
|
/* Definition of a pattern substitution meta operation on a DEFINE_EXPAND
|
|
or a DEFINE_INSN. Automatically generates new instances of DEFINE_INSNs
|
|
that match the substitution pattern.
|
|
|
|
Operand:
|
|
0: The name of the substitition template.
|
|
1: Input template to match to see if a substitution is applicable.
|
|
2: A C expression giving an additional condition for the generated
|
|
new define_expand or define_insn.
|
|
3: Output tempalate to generate via substitution.
|
|
|
|
Within a DEFINE_SUBST template, the meaning of some RTL expressions is
|
|
different from their usual interpretation: a MATCH_OPERAND matches any
|
|
expression tree with matching machine mode or with VOIDmode. Likewise,
|
|
MATCH_OP_DUP and MATCH_DUP match more liberally in a DEFINE_SUBST than
|
|
in other RTL expressions. MATCH_OPERATOR matches all common operators
|
|
but also UNSPEC, UNSPEC_VOLATILE, and MATCH_OPERATORS from the input
|
|
DEFINE_EXPAND or DEFINE_INSN. */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_SUBST, "define_subst", "sEsE", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
/* Substitution attribute to apply a DEFINE_SUBST to a pattern.
|
|
|
|
Operand:
|
|
0: The name of the subst-attribute.
|
|
1: The name of the DEFINE_SUBST to be applied for this attribute.
|
|
2: String to substitute for the subst-attribute name in the pattern
|
|
name, for the case that the DEFINE_SUBST is not applied (i.e. the
|
|
unmodified version of the pattern).
|
|
3: String to substitute for the subst-attribute name in the pattern
|
|
name, for the case that the DEFINE_SUBST is applied to the patten.
|
|
|
|
The use of DEFINE_SUBST and DEFINE_SUBST_ATTR is explained in the
|
|
GCC internals manual, under "RTL Templates Transformations". */
|
|
DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_SUBST_ATTR, "define_subst_attr", "ssss", RTX_EXTRA)
|
|
|
|
#endif /* GENERATOR_FILE */
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
Local variables:
|
|
mode:c
|
|
End:
|
|
*/
|