Commit graph

64 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
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
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
54d776f243 [qfcc] Take operand width into account
Operand width is encoded in the instruction opcode, so the width needs
to be accounted for in order to select the correct instruction. With
this, my little test generates correct code for the ruamoko ISA (except
for return, still fails).
2022-01-20 16:49:07 +09:00
Bill Currie
4111d44dcc [gamecode] Move progs auxiliary headers into a subdirectory
Just another step along the road of tidying up the QF include directory
(and desirable for generated data).
2022-01-09 00:26:52 +09:00
Bill Currie
22c67fc268 [qfcc] Use flow analysis for dealloc check
I decided that the check for whether control reaches the end of the
function without performing some necessary action (eg, invoking
[super dealoc] in a derived -dealoc) is conceptually the return
statement using a pseudo operand and the necessary action defining that
pseudo operand and thus is the same as checking for uninitialised
variables. Thus, add a pseudo operand type and use one to represent the
invocation of [super alloc], with a special function to call when the
"used" pseudo operand is "uninitialised".

While I currently don't know what else pseudo operands could be used
for, the system should be flexible enough to add any check.

Fixes #24
2021-12-25 17:04:26 +09:00
Bill Currie
f903211362 [qfcc] Make operand union anonymous
This one was easy enough and gets rid of that little o. wart.
2021-12-25 12:40:24 +09:00
Bill Currie
34c9ec51bb [qfcc] Make opcode and statement type names available 2020-03-17 22:46:23 +09:00
Bill Currie
16bda66785 [qfcc] Add more statement types for move/memset
They ease the statement checks between assign/move/memset and the
pointer versions (don't need all those strcmps)
2020-03-17 21:39:49 +09:00
Bill Currie
a0c28a5ac5 [qfcc] Support pointers to temp operands
This is necessary for correctly taking the address of operands.
2020-03-16 14:24:47 +09:00
Bill Currie
97e0c23529 [qfcc] Create a nil operand
This is for struct assignments so they can pass the source operand back
up the assignment chain.
2020-03-14 17:47:23 +09:00
Bill Currie
7d5644e055 [qfcc] Save operand creator return address 2020-03-14 17:44:54 +09:00
Bill Currie
4a8854d9ed [qfcc] Add expression tracking to operands
Not much uses it yet, but it will make for better diagnostics.
2020-03-11 12:51:34 +09:00
Bill Currie
1985b6d4fd Avoid creating a struct temp for ivar struct return
This fixed the uninitialized temp warning in HUD.r. The problem was
caused by the flow analyzer not being able to detect that the struct
temp was being initialized by the move statement due to the address of
the temp being in a pointer temp. While it would be good to use a
constant pointer for the address of the struct temp or improving the
flow analyzer to track actual data, avoiding the temp in the first place
results in nicer code as it removes a move statement.
2020-02-15 23:49:12 +09:00
Bill Currie
8caf2eb584 Mark some new functions as pure 2019-06-27 21:37:48 +09:00
Bill Currie
b996fb7aa4 Make operand->type actual type instead of low-level
And clean up the resulting mess. This fixes struct copy, but uncovers
another bug :/
2019-06-17 23:38:34 +09:00
Bill Currie
bc271d8a02 Add tempop_visit_all
Works the same as def_visit_all, but for temp operands.
2019-06-16 16:52:49 +09:00
Bill Currie
fa69aeef0f Improve handling of temp aliases
This makes all tests pass when not optimizing. More work needs to be
done in dags.
2019-06-12 00:37:02 +09:00
Bill Currie
ee1f5f9478 Add support for binary alias expressions
Doesn't quite work yet.
2019-06-10 23:48:58 +09:00
Bill Currie
34bcf7faab Do a pure/const/noreturn/format attribute pass.
I always wanted these, but as gcc now provides warnings for functions that
could do with such attributes, finding all the functions is much easier.
2018-10-09 12:42:21 +09:00
Bill Currie
cdbdf3f0eb Make print_operand global. 2018-08-23 20:05:16 +09:00
Bill Currie
c7ae58d7a3 Allow flownodes and sblocks to be numbered independently.
The numbering will need to be independent when unreachable nodes are
removed.
2012-12-19 16:22:15 +09:00
Bill Currie
c61e03a0b9 Clean up operand creation.
Rather than having the creation scattered through the code, use helper
functions. Makes exposing operand creating saner.
2012-12-13 12:49:00 +09:00
Bill Currie
7607c7d649 Resurrect alias operands.
It turns out they are necessary for the code output from dags. This fixes
the ice for *to = *from++;
2012-12-11 15:52:37 +09:00
Bill Currie
8582e9de63 Make it possible to dump statement blocks in a flow graph.
Much nicer looking with proper back edges :). Not actually enabled, though.
2012-12-11 11:31:55 +09:00
Bill Currie
b6ae9867c2 Fully connect temps and their aliases. 2012-12-06 09:40:16 +09:00
Bill Currie
3f3b501c58 Move flowvar/deflabel from symbol_t to def_t.
With the need to handle aliasing in the optimizer, it has become apparent
that having the flow data attached to symbols is not nearly as useful as
having it attached to defs (which are views of the actual variables).

This also involves a bit of a cleanup of operand types: op_pointer and
op_alias are gone (this seems to greatly simplify the optimizer)

There is a bit of a problem with enums in switch statements, but this might
actually be a sign that something is not quite right in the switch code
(other than enums not being recognized as ints for jump table
optimization).
2012-12-05 19:47:22 +09:00
Bill Currie
d47fa0fc89 Make the new optimizations optional.
The usual -O :) (no numbers yet, though). Alternatively, -C [no-]optimize
may be used.
2012-12-01 11:13:45 +09:00
Bill Currie
848493379d Support calls through function temps.
I had forgotten function vars stored in ents and objects would use a temp
when calling the function.
2012-12-01 11:10:47 +09:00
Bill Currie
554b2e4710 Add flow analysis to determin the type of .return.
It doesn't quite work yet, but...

It has proven necessary to know what type .return has at any point in the
function. The segfault in ctf is caused by the return statement added to
the end of the void function messing with the expr pointer stored in the
daglabel for .return. While this is actually by design (though the
statement really should have a valid expr pointer rather than), it actually
highlights a bigger problem: there's no stable knowledge of the current
type of .return. This is not a problem in expression statements as the
dagnodes for expression statements store the desired types of all operands.
However, when assigning from .return to attached variables in a leaf node,
the type of .return is not stored anywhere but the expression last
accessing .return.
2012-11-30 17:15:05 +09:00
Bill Currie
93f53605ed Move and rename statement related flow_is_* and flow_get_*
They really should have been in statements.[ch] in the first place
(actually, they sort of were: is_goto etc, so some redundant code has been
removed, too).
2012-11-30 14:06:52 +09:00
Bill Currie
0c3aeb30aa Reuse tempary variables.
Now that I've got nice code, it was worth doing. Unfortunatly, bsearch
style switch statements have problems.
switch.r:14: BUG: temp users went negative: <tmp 0x21b6840:-1>
switch.r:14: BUG: temp users went negative: <tmp 0x21b6840:-2>
switch.r:14: BUG: temp users went negative: <tmp 0x21b6840:-3>
switch.r:14: BUG: temp users went negative: <tmp 0x21b67d0:-1>
2012-11-18 19:10:18 +09:00
Bill Currie
1100efba54 Nuke find_operands in favor of flow_analyze_statement.
flow_analyze_statement uses the statement type to quickly determin which
operands are inputs and which are outputs. It takes (optional) sets for
used variables, defined variables and killed variables (only partially
working, but I don't actually use kill sets yet). It also takes an optional
array for storing the operands: index 0 is the output, 1-3 are the inputs.
flow_analyze_statement clears any given sets on entry.

Live variable analysis now uses the sets rather than individual vars. Much
cleaner code :).

Dags are completely broken.
2012-11-16 19:33:37 +09:00
Bill Currie
001e1ac059 Classify statements into broad types.
The types are expression, assignment, pointer assignment (ie, write to a
dereferenced pointer), move (special case of pointer assignment), state,
function call/return, and flow control. With this classification, it will
be easier (less code:) to determine which operands are inputs and which are
outputs.
2012-11-16 16:16:06 +09:00
Bill Currie
c1a5c1a7b2 Create alias_operand (). 2012-11-15 15:52:30 +09:00
Bill Currie
1c32ac8ce6 Expose new_statement, too. 2012-11-15 13:44:09 +09:00
Bill Currie
802e1981bb Expose some statements functions needed for code gen. 2012-11-15 13:44:09 +09:00
Bill Currie
c43a8331cf Expose dump_dot_sblock. 2012-11-15 13:44:09 +09:00
Bill Currie
2b2ea5c9b3 Compute dags as part of data flow analysis.
I want to use the live variable information when building the dags.
2012-11-15 13:44:08 +09:00
Bill Currie
c358a0e77e Create a function to generalize dot dumping.
Now, any time a graph is wanted, the file can be consistently named without
a lot of messy code.
2012-11-15 13:44:08 +09:00
Bill Currie
c00e666668 Expose find_operands.
It has proven to be a generally useful function, not just for dags.
2012-11-15 13:44:08 +09:00
Bill Currie
0b49bd343c Collect information on statements that set or use vars.
First, it turns out using daglabels wasn't such a workable plan (due to
labels being flushed every sblock). Instead, flowvars are used. Each actual
variable (whether normal or temp) has a pointer to the flowvar attached to
that variable.

For each variable, the statements that use or define the variable are
recorded in the appropriate set attached to each (flow)variable.
2012-11-15 13:44:08 +09:00
Bill Currie
acedc65de1 Make an array of statements for the function.
With this, sets can be used to represent statements.
2012-11-15 13:44:07 +09:00
Bill Currie
8844ac61a2 Rename dump_flow to dump_sblock and move to dot_sblock.c 2012-11-15 13:44:07 +09:00
Bill Currie
8b374305d2 Rename dot_flow.c and print_flow.
They're now dot_sblock.c and print_sblock. The new names both better
reflect their purpose and free up "flow" for outputting the real flow
analysis graphs.
2012-11-15 13:44:07 +09:00
Bill Currie
c483770121 Rework flow.c with the aim of graph reduction.
Much of the data recently added to sblock_t has been moved to flownode_t.
No graph reduction is carried out yet, but the initial (innermost level)
graph has been built.
2012-11-15 13:44:07 +09:00
Bill Currie
1fead50f4e Calculate the dominators of each node in the flow graph.
The dominators are represented by sets using the node numbers.
2012-11-15 13:44:07 +09:00
Bill Currie
7853bf1859 Calculate a node's successors and predecessors.
The dot graphs are a little odd (arrow heads on the wrong end of the
predecessor edges), but things seem to be correct.
2012-11-15 13:44:06 +09:00
Bill Currie
739ebc522c Begin working on flow analysis.
For now, variable and flow graph node maps are built.
2012-11-15 13:44:06 +09:00
Bill Currie
a22260030a Use value for pointer operands.
This allows daglabels on pointer operands without a redundant daglabel
pointer.
2012-11-15 13:44:06 +09:00
Bill Currie
dbf1aa8f72 Attach dags to statement blocks.
Now, if a dag is attached to a statement block, it will be included in the
flowgraph with that statement block.
2012-11-15 13:44:06 +09:00