Commit graph

830 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Bill Currie
0c116b8ff0 [qfcc] Record actual statements in a function
This is to help with building ud-chains as I suspect I won't be all that
interested in defs from the dummy blocks.
2023-05-19 17:50:19 +09:00
Bill Currie
7b7b2ef000 [qfcc] Add flow defs for parameters
Needed for proper analysis (ud-chains etc). Of course, it was then
necessary to remove the parameter defs from the uninitialized defs.

Also, plug a couple of memory leaks (forgot to free some temporary
sets).
2023-05-14 13:40:40 +09:00
Bill Currie
cee00c8243 [qfcc] Fix declarators for pointers/functions/arrays
I had messed up the handling of declarators for combinations of pointer,
function, and array: the pointer would get lost (and presumably arrays
of functions etc). I think I had gotten confused and thought things were
a tree rather than a simple list, but Holub set me straight once again
(I've never regretted getting that book). Once I understood that, it was
just a matter of finding all the places that needed to be fixed. Nicely,
most of the duplicated code has been refactored and should be easier to
debug in the future.
2023-03-09 02:22:23 +09:00
Bill Currie
694c3ad5f5 [qfcc] Ensure params and arguments have unique flow addresses
This fixes the false-negative in the dealloc-warn4.r test (and thus what
I found in vkgen), and should stave off a few other issues.
2023-02-26 20:43:52 +09:00
Bill Currie
3a297c70b3 [qfcc] Handle qc function field parameters
The type system rewrite had lost some of the checks for function fields.
This puts the actual code in the one place and covers parameters as well
as globals.
2023-02-14 12:45:04 +09:00
Bill Currie
bc2204d446 [qfcc] Differentiate symtabs by intended use
The symtab code itself cares only about global/not global for the size
of the hash table, but other code can use the symtab type for various
checks (eg, parameter shadowing).
2023-02-14 12:45:04 +09:00
Bill Currie
fc7c96d208 [qfcc] Support C's full type system
Along with QuakeC's, of course. This fixes type typeredef2 test (a lot
of work for one little syntax error). Unfortunately, it came at the cost
of requiring `>>` in front of state expressions on C-style functions
(QuakeC-style functions are unaffected). Also, there are now two
shift/reduce conflicts with structs and unions (but these same conflicts
are in gcc 3.4).

This has highlighted the need for having the equivalent of the
expression tree for the declaration system as there are now several
hacks to deal with the separation of types and declarators. But that's a
job for another week.

The grammar constructs for declarations come from gcc 3.4's parser (I
think it's the last version of gcc that used bison. Also, 3.4 is still
GPL 2, so no chance of an issue there).
2023-02-14 12:45:04 +09:00
Bill Currie
02432311c5 [qfcc] Add a function to print the source line
It's not used anywhere, but it saves me a lot of grief when debugging.
2023-02-14 12:45:04 +09:00
Bill Currie
e1d7854af5 [qfcc] Rename G_* macros to Q_*
They clash with those in progs.h, which is needed for using progs code
in the compiler.
2022-11-16 17:53:21 +09:00
Bill Currie
95b8424ddf [qfcc] Use new extend instruction instead of swizzle
While swizzle does work, it requires the source to be properly aligned
and thus is not really the best choice. The extend instruction has no
alignment requirements (at all) and thus is much better suited to
converting a scalar to a vector type.

Fixes #30
2022-08-18 18:18:19 +09:00
Bill Currie
6253d775e6 [qfcc] Adjust ivar offsets to preserve alignment
As a class's ivars are built up by inheritance, but with only that
class's ivars in the symbol table, is is necessary to include an offset
based on the super class's ivars in order to ensure alignments are
respected. This is achieved via the new `base` parameter to
build_struct(), which is used to offset the current size while
calculating the aligned offset of the symbols. The parameter is ignored
for unions, as they always start at 0. The ivars for the current class
still have a base offset of 0 until they are actually added to the
class.

Fixes #29
2022-07-31 17:15:47 +09:00
Bill Currie
f4ae24e0e0 [qfcc] Support alignment in qfo spaces
The alignment is specified as a power of 2 (ie, actual alignment = 1 <<
alignment) allowing old object files to be compatible (as their
alignment is 0). This is necessary for (in part for #30) as it turned
out even global vectors were not aligned correctly.

Currently, only data spaces even vaguely respect alignment. This may
need to be fixed in the future.
2022-07-31 17:15:47 +09:00
Bill Currie
2c8bec27c7 Fix a pile of warnings for gcc 12
Most were pretty easy and fairly logical, but gib's regex was a bit of a
pain until I figured out the real problem was the conditional
assignments.

However, libs/gamecode/test/test-conv4 fails when optimizing due to gcc
using vcvttps2dq (which is nice, actually) for vector forms, but not the
single equivalent other times. I haven't decided what to do with the
test (I might abandon it as it does seem to be UD).
2022-07-31 17:13:26 +09:00
Bill Currie
ef9960c6f9 [qfcc] Implement support for the swizzle operator
The destination operand must be a full four component vector, but the
source can be smaller and small sources do not need to be aligned: the
offset of the source operand and the swizzle indices are adjusted. The
adjustments are done during final statement emission in order to avoid
confusing the data flow analyser (and that's when def offsets are known).
2022-05-01 14:35:24 +09:00
Bill Currie
9cccb7a4d4 [qfcc] Implement ulong, long and uint constants
Finally :P
2022-04-29 18:12:47 +09:00
Bill Currie
14545c37cf [qfcc] Merge printing of values into the one place
Having three very similar sets of code for outputting values (just for
debug purposes even) got to be a tad annoying. Now there's only one, and
in the right place, too (with the other value code).
2022-04-29 16:59:55 +09:00
Bill Currie
1eb8b61b83 [qfcc] Clean up handling of value expressions
I'd created new_value_expr some time ago, but never used it...
Also, replace convert_* with cast_expr to the appropriate type (removes
a pile of value check and create code).
2022-04-29 16:59:55 +09:00
Bill Currie
04f60e5ff1 [qfcc] Rework vector expression handling
Use with quaternions and vectors is a little broken in that
vec4/quaternion and vec3/vector are not the same types (by design) and
thus a cast is needed (not what I want, though). However, creating
vectors (that happen to be int due to int constants) does seem to be
working nicely otherwise.
2022-04-29 16:59:55 +09:00
Bill Currie
85d851572f [qfcc] Implement constant casts for the new vector types
Nicely, I was able to reuse the generated conversion code used by the
progs engine to do the work in qfcc, just needed appropriate definitions
for the operand macros, and to set up the conversion code. Helped
greatly by the new value load/store functions.
2022-04-29 16:59:55 +09:00
Bill Currie
ae0b3a5870 [qfcc] Add some utility functions for working with vector types
Finding vector types from base type and width, and getting the base type
for a vector type, as well as basic promotion rules for math types.
2022-04-29 16:59:15 +09:00
Bill Currie
c120bf2940 [qfcc] Add functions to store and load values
This makes working with constant expressions much less tedious,
especially when the relevant code needs to work with many types.
2022-04-29 16:59:15 +09:00
Bill Currie
8912c65029 [qfcc] Indicate type width in type strings
Makes for much more informative error messages for type mismatches
(confusing when both sides look the same).
2022-04-29 16:59:15 +09:00
Bill Currie
6d62e91ce7 [gamecode] Clean up progs data access
pr_type_t now contains only the one "value" field, and all the access
macros now use their PACKED variant for base access, making access to
larger types more consistent with the smaller types.
2022-04-29 16:59:15 +09:00
Bill Currie
70af362562 [qfcc] Unify temp def, return value and parameter sizes
In working with vectors and matrices while testing the scene wrappers, I
found that there was a fair bit of confusion about how large something
could be. Return values can be up to 32 words (but qfcc wasn't aware of
that), parameters were limited to 4 words still (and possibly should be
for varargs), and temp defs were limited to 8 words (1 lvec4). Temps are
used for handling return values (at least when not optimizing) and thus
must be capable of holding a return value, and passing large arguments
through *formal* parameters should be allowed. It seems reasonable to
limit parameter sizes to return value sizes.

A temp and a move are still used for large return values (4x4 matrix),
but that's an optimization issue: the code itself is at least correct.
2022-02-15 08:39:20 +09:00
Bill Currie
59044d3827 Fix a bunch of distcheck issues 2022-02-14 19:28:19 +09:00
Bill Currie
abe43584ff [qfcc] Create vector component symbols for parameters
This got lost when the stack frame setup was converted for Ruamoko.
2022-02-06 21:20:00 +09:00
Bill Currie
5f6e0767d7 [qfcc] Make the meaning of vec * vec selectable
Currently only via pragma (not command line options), but I needed to
test the concept. Converting legacy code is just too error prone.
Telling the compiler how to treat the operator makes more sense. When *
acts as @dot with Ruamoko progs, the result is automatically aliased as
a float as this is the legacy meaning (ie, float result for dot
product).
2022-02-06 21:20:00 +09:00
Bill Currie
1ce026d168 [qfcc] Implement bounced return pointer calls
This is achieved by marking a void function with the void_return
attribute and then calling that function in an @return expression.
@return can be used only inside a void function and only with void
functions marked with the void_return attribute. As this is intended for
Objective-QC message forwarding, it is deliberately "difficult" to use
as returning a larger than expected value is unlikely to end well for
the calling function.

However, as a convenience, "@return nil" is allowed (in a void
function). It always returns an integer (which, of course,can be
interpreted as a pointer). This is safe because if the return value is
ignored, it will go into the progs return buffer, and if it is not
ignored, it is the smallest value that can be returned.
2022-02-05 19:30:08 +09:00
Bill Currie
8cc6cbc157 [qfcc] Use a union to manage function attributes
Same idea as the specifiers, but makes checking function types are the
same much easier.
2022-02-05 19:30:08 +09:00
Bill Currie
f153e87daa [qfcc] Use a union to manage specifier bits
Having to remember to copy yet another specifier bit was getting
tedious, so use a union of a struct with the bitfields and an unsigned
int to access them in parallel. Makes for a tidier spec_merge, and one
less headache.
2022-02-05 18:45:54 +09:00
Bill Currie
f3770cc647 [qfcc] Add --ruamoko command line option and pragma
The command line option works the same way as
--advanced/traditional/extended, as does the pragma. As well, raumoko
(alternative spelling) can be used because both are legitimate and some
people may prefer one spelling over the other.

As always, use of the pragma is at one's own risk: its intended use is
forcing the target in the unit tests.
2022-02-04 09:27:07 +09:00
Bill Currie
52a399daeb [qfcc] Update sizes and alignments for dvec4 and friends
dvec4, lvec4 and ulvec4 need to be aligned to 8 words (32 bytes) in
order to avoid hardware exceptions. Rather than dealing with possibly
mixed alignment when a function has 8-word aligned locals but only
4-word aligned parameters, simply keep the stack frame 8-word aligned at
all times.

As for sizes, the temp def recycler was written before the Ruamoko ISA
was even a pipe dream and thus never expected temp def sizes over 4. At
least now any future adjustments can be done in one place.

My quick and dirty test program works :)

    dvec4 xy = {1d, 2d, 0d, 0.5};
    void printf(string fmt, ...) = #0;
    int main()
    {
	dvec4 u = {3, 4, 3.14};
	dvec4 v = {3, 4, 0, 1};
	dvec4 w = v * xy + u;
	printf ("[%g, %g, %g, %g]\n", w[0], w[1], w[2], w[3]);
	return 0;
    }
2022-02-04 08:46:58 +09:00
Bill Currie
1487fa6b50 [qfcc] Implement some basics for the vector types
They're now properly part of the type system and can be used for
declaring variables, initialized (using {} block initializers), operated
on (=, *, + tested) though much work needs to be done on binary
expressions, and indexed. So far, only ivec2 has been tested.
2022-02-04 00:25:31 +09:00
Bill Currie
b668759b7d [qfcc] Add a very basic attribute system
Ruamoko passes va_list (@args) through the ... parameter (as such), but
IMP uses ... to defeat parameter type and count checking and doesn't
want va_list. While possibly not the best solution, adding a no_va_list
flag to function types and skipping ex_args entirely does take care of
the problem without hard-coding anything specific to IMP.

The system currently just sets some bits in the type specifier (the
attribute list should probably be carried around with the specifier),
but it gets the job done for now, and at least gets things started.
2022-02-02 23:51:37 +09:00
Bill Currie
a64f91129f [qfcc] Give lea its own statement type
This makes it much easier to check (and more robust to name changes),
allowing for effectively killing the node to which the variable being
addressed is attached. This fixes the incorrect address being used for
va_list, which is what caused double-alias to fail.
2022-02-02 18:55:01 +09:00
Bill Currie
3f389b602a [qfcc] Add support for horizontal vector ops
And reimplement vector comparison for Ruamoko.
2022-01-30 10:56:15 +09:00
Bill Currie
feb3be4e6b [qfcc] Add types for ivec3/4 and vec3/4
Needed to get quaternions and vectors going. I'll add more later.
2022-01-30 10:54:07 +09:00
Bill Currie
fbaf1456fe [qfcc] Use auxiliary operands for move instructions
Since Ruamoko progs must use lea to get the address of a local variable,
add use/def/kill references to the move instruction in order to inform
flow analysis of the variable since it is otherwise lost via the
resulting pointer (not an issue when direct var reference move can be
used).

The test and digging for the def can probably do with being more
aggressive, but this did nicely as a proof of concept.
2022-01-29 18:26:54 +09:00
Bill Currie
0123e12304 [qfcc] Use locals and params_start to describe stack frame
This is necessary to get statement disassembly working, and likely
debugging in general. locals is the total size of the stack frame and
thus reaches above the function-entry stack pointer, and params_start is
the local space relative start of the parameters. Thus, knowing the
function-entry stack pointer, the bottom of the locals space can be
found by subtracting params_start, and the top of the locals space by
adding (locals - params_start).
2022-01-27 11:37:37 +09:00
Bill Currie
169b8cc398 [qfcc] Rewrite qfo_to_progs offset/size calculation
This gets all the sections of the progs file nicely aligned and the code
easier to read with the offset and size calculations not being spread
through the function. ivar-struct-return now works when compiled for
Ruamoko.
2022-01-26 23:18:15 +09:00
Bill Currie
06d70a32db [qfcc] Rework the functionality of address expressions
The goal was to get lea being used for locals in ruamoko progs because
lea takes the base registers into account while the constant pointer
defs used by v6p cannot. Pointer defs are still used for gobals as they
may be out of reach of 16-bit addressing.

address_expr() has been simplified in that it no longer takes an offset:
the vast majority of the callers never passed one, and the few that did
have been reworked to use other mechanisms. In particular,
offset_pointer_expr does the manipulations needed to add an offset
(unscaled by type size) to a pointer. High-level pointer offsets still
apply a scale, though.

Alias expressions now do a better job of hanling aliasing of aliases by
simply replacing the target type when possible.
2022-01-25 23:39:17 +09:00
Bill Currie
fc73cfc1e0 [qfcc] Rename pointer_expr to deref_pointer_expr
This reflects what it actually does (usually, "pointer_expr" type naming
is creating an expression that represents a pointer).
2022-01-25 12:28:53 +09:00
Bill Currie
37f08f9d4f [qfcc] Build the Ruamoko function parameters
The parameter defs are allocated from the parameter space using a
minimum alignment of 4, and varargs functions get a va_list struct in
place of the ...

An "args" expression is unconditionally injected into the call arguments
list at the place where ... is in the list, with arguments passed
through ... coming after the ...

Arguments get through to functions now, but there's problems with taking
the address of local variables: currently done using constant pointer
defs, which can't work for the base register addressing used in Ruamoko
progs.

With the update to test-bi's printf (and a hack to qfcc for lea),
triangle.r actually works, printing the expected results (but -1 instead
of 1 for equality, though that too is actually expected). qfcc will take
a bit longer because it seems there are some design issues in address
expressions (ambiguity, and a few other things) that have pretty much
always been there.
2022-01-24 23:44:48 +09:00
Bill Currie
1f802716e1 [qfcc] Pass initialize_def the symtab to use as a parameter
This takes care of an old FIXME.
2022-01-24 12:48:02 +09:00
Bill Currie
0a5101f88c [qfcc] Specify base register index for local defs
While all base registers can be used for any purpose at any time (this
is why the with instruction has hard-absolute modes: you can never get
permanently lost), qfcc currently uses the convention of register 0 for
globals and register 1 for stack locals (params, locals, function args).
The register used to access a def is stored in the def and that is used
to set the register bits in the instruction opcode.

The def code actually doesn't know anything about any conventions: it
assumes all defs are global for non-temp defs (the function code updates
the defs before emitting code) and the current function provides the
register to use for any temp defs allocated while emitting code.

Seems to work well, but debug is utterly messed up (not surprised, that
will be tricky).
2022-01-21 20:34:43 +09:00
Bill Currie
79bd4dd724 [qfcc] Set up the function stack frame
Still need to get the base register index into the instructions, but I
think this is it for basic code generation. I should be able to start
testing Ruamoko properly fairly soon :)
2022-01-21 20:00:38 +09:00
Bill Currie
616a52efb5 [qfcc] Implement flow analysis for Ruamoko calls
Thanks to the use/def/kill lists attached to statements for pseudo-ops,
it turned out to be a lot easier to implement flow analysis (and thus
dags processing) than I expected. I suspect I should go back and make
the old call code use them too, and probably several other places, as
that will greatly simplify the edge setting.
2022-01-21 17:14:10 +09:00
Bill Currie
33a3f92503 [qfcc] Move .return handling into statements.c
The means that the actual call expression is not in the statement lint
of the enclosing block expression, but just its result, whether the call
is void or not. This actually simplifies several things, but most
importantly will make Ruamoko calls easier to implement.

The test is because I had some trouble with double-calls, and is how I
found the return-postop issue :P
2022-01-21 13:09:23 +09:00
Bill Currie
7bc1396358 [qfcc] Split the function defspace into three spaces
Since Ruamoko now uses the stack for parameters and locals, parameters
need to come after locals in the address space (instead of before, as in
v6 progs). Thus use separate spaces for parameters and locals regardless
of the target, then stitch them together appropriately for the target.
The third space is used for allocating stack space for arguments to
called functions. It us not used for v6 progs, and comes before locals
in Ruamoko progs.

Other than the return value, and optimization (ice, not implemented)
calls in Ruamoko look like they'll work.
2022-01-21 10:20:02 +09:00
Bill Currie
b8b47aaf54 [qfcc] Give finish_function the finishing blow
It's been twitching for over ten years, time to put it out of its
misery.
2022-01-21 00:23:40 +09:00