Remove the boolean types from cranelift, and the associated instructions breduce, bextend, bconst, and bint. Standardize on using 1/0 for the return value from instructions that produce scalar boolean results, and -1/0 for boolean vector elements. Fixes #3205 Co-authored-by: Afonso Bordado <afonso360@users.noreply.github.com> Co-authored-by: Ulrich Weigand <ulrich.weigand@de.ibm.com> Co-authored-by: Chris Fallin <chris@cfallin.org>
155 lines
5.5 KiB
Rust
155 lines
5.5 KiB
Rust
//! Instruction predicates/properties, shared by various analyses.
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use crate::ir::immediates::Offset32;
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use crate::ir::instructions::BranchInfo;
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use crate::ir::{Block, DataFlowGraph, Function, Inst, InstructionData, Opcode, Type, Value};
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use cranelift_entity::EntityRef;
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/// Preserve instructions with used result values.
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pub fn any_inst_results_used(inst: Inst, live: &[bool], dfg: &DataFlowGraph) -> bool {
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dfg.inst_results(inst).iter().any(|v| live[v.index()])
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}
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/// Test whether the given opcode is unsafe to even consider as side-effect-free.
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#[inline(always)]
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fn trivially_has_side_effects(opcode: Opcode) -> bool {
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opcode.is_call()
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|| opcode.is_branch()
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|| opcode.is_terminator()
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|| opcode.is_return()
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|| opcode.can_trap()
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|| opcode.other_side_effects()
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|| opcode.can_store()
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}
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/// Load instructions without the `notrap` flag are defined to trap when
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/// operating on inaccessible memory, so we can't treat them as side-effect-free even if the loaded
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/// value is unused.
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#[inline(always)]
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fn is_load_with_defined_trapping(opcode: Opcode, data: &InstructionData) -> bool {
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if !opcode.can_load() {
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return false;
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}
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match *data {
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InstructionData::StackLoad { .. } => false,
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InstructionData::Load { flags, .. } => !flags.notrap(),
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_ => true,
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}
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}
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/// Does the given instruction have any side-effect that would preclude it from being removed when
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/// its value is unused?
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#[inline(always)]
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pub fn has_side_effect(func: &Function, inst: Inst) -> bool {
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let data = &func.dfg[inst];
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let opcode = data.opcode();
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trivially_has_side_effects(opcode) || is_load_with_defined_trapping(opcode, data)
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}
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/// Does the given instruction have any side-effect as per [has_side_effect], or else is a load,
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/// but not the get_pinned_reg opcode?
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pub fn has_lowering_side_effect(func: &Function, inst: Inst) -> bool {
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let op = func.dfg[inst].opcode();
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op != Opcode::GetPinnedReg && (has_side_effect(func, inst) || op.can_load())
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}
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/// Is the given instruction a constant value (`iconst`, `fconst`) that can be
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/// represented in 64 bits?
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pub fn is_constant_64bit(func: &Function, inst: Inst) -> Option<u64> {
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let data = &func.dfg[inst];
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if data.opcode() == Opcode::Null {
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return Some(0);
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}
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match data {
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&InstructionData::UnaryImm { imm, .. } => Some(imm.bits() as u64),
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&InstructionData::UnaryIeee32 { imm, .. } => Some(imm.bits() as u64),
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&InstructionData::UnaryIeee64 { imm, .. } => Some(imm.bits()),
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_ => None,
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}
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}
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/// Get the address, offset, and access type from the given instruction, if any.
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pub fn inst_addr_offset_type(func: &Function, inst: Inst) -> Option<(Value, Offset32, Type)> {
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let data = &func.dfg[inst];
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match data {
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InstructionData::Load { arg, offset, .. } => {
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let ty = func.dfg.value_type(func.dfg.inst_results(inst)[0]);
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Some((*arg, *offset, ty))
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}
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InstructionData::LoadNoOffset { arg, .. } => {
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let ty = func.dfg.value_type(func.dfg.inst_results(inst)[0]);
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Some((*arg, 0.into(), ty))
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}
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InstructionData::Store { args, offset, .. } => {
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let ty = func.dfg.value_type(args[0]);
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Some((args[1], *offset, ty))
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}
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InstructionData::StoreNoOffset { args, .. } => {
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let ty = func.dfg.value_type(args[0]);
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Some((args[1], 0.into(), ty))
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}
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_ => None,
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}
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}
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/// Get the store data, if any, from an instruction.
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pub fn inst_store_data(func: &Function, inst: Inst) -> Option<Value> {
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let data = &func.dfg[inst];
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match data {
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InstructionData::Store { args, .. } | InstructionData::StoreNoOffset { args, .. } => {
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Some(args[0])
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}
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_ => None,
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}
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}
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/// Determine whether this opcode behaves as a memory fence, i.e.,
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/// prohibits any moving of memory accesses across it.
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pub fn has_memory_fence_semantics(op: Opcode) -> bool {
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match op {
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Opcode::AtomicRmw
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| Opcode::AtomicCas
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| Opcode::AtomicLoad
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| Opcode::AtomicStore
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| Opcode::Fence
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| Opcode::Debugtrap => true,
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Opcode::Call | Opcode::CallIndirect => true,
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op if op.can_trap() => true,
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_ => false,
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}
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}
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/// Visit all successors of a block with a given visitor closure. The closure
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/// arguments are the branch instruction that is used to reach the successor,
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/// the successor block itself, and a flag indicating whether the block is
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/// branched to via a table entry.
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pub(crate) fn visit_block_succs<F: FnMut(Inst, Block, bool)>(
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f: &Function,
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block: Block,
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mut visit: F,
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) {
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for inst in f.layout.block_likely_branches(block) {
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if f.dfg[inst].opcode().is_branch() {
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visit_branch_targets(f, inst, &mut visit);
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}
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}
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}
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fn visit_branch_targets<F: FnMut(Inst, Block, bool)>(f: &Function, inst: Inst, visit: &mut F) {
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match f.dfg[inst].analyze_branch(&f.dfg.value_lists) {
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BranchInfo::NotABranch => {}
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BranchInfo::SingleDest(dest, _) => {
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visit(inst, dest, false);
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}
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BranchInfo::Table(table, maybe_dest) => {
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if let Some(dest) = maybe_dest {
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// The default block is reached via a direct conditional branch,
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// so it is not part of the table.
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visit(inst, dest, false);
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}
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for &dest in f.jump_tables[table].as_slice() {
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visit(inst, dest, true);
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}
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}
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}
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}
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