Next: Incdec, Previous: RTL Declarations, Up: RTL
The expression codes described so far represent values, not actions. But machine instructions never produce values; they are meaningful only for their side effects on the state of the machine. Special expression codes are used to represent side effects.
The body of an instruction is always one of these side effect codes; the codes described above, which represent values, appear only as the operands of these.
(set
lval x)
reg
(or subreg
,
strict_low_part
or zero_extract
), mem
, pc
,
parallel
, or cc0
.
If lval is a reg
, subreg
or mem
, it has a
machine mode; then x must be valid for that mode.
If lval is a reg
whose machine mode is less than the full
width of the register, then it means that the part of the register
specified by the machine mode is given the specified value and the
rest of the register receives an undefined value. Likewise, if
lval is a subreg
whose machine mode is narrower than
the mode of the register, the rest of the register can be changed in
an undefined way.
If lval is a strict_low_part
of a subreg, then the part
of the register specified by the machine mode of the subreg
is
given the value x and the rest of the register is not changed.
If lval is a zero_extract
, then the referenced part of
the bit-field (a memory or register reference) specified by the
zero_extract
is given the value x and the rest of the
bit-field is not changed. Note that sign_extract
can not
appear in lval.
If lval is (cc0)
, it has no machine mode, and x may
be either a compare
expression or a value that may have any mode.
The latter case represents a “test” instruction. The expression
(set (cc0) (reg:
m n))
is equivalent to
(set (cc0) (compare (reg:
m n) (const_int 0)))
.
Use the former expression to save space during the compilation.
If lval is a parallel
, it is used to represent the case of
a function returning a structure in multiple registers. Each element
of the parallel
is an expr_list
whose first operand is a
reg
and whose second operand is a const_int
representing the
offset (in bytes) into the structure at which the data in that register
corresponds. The first element may be null to indicate that the structure
is also passed partly in memory.
If lval is (pc)
, we have a jump instruction, and the
possibilities for x are very limited. It may be a
label_ref
expression (unconditional jump). It may be an
if_then_else
(conditional jump), in which case either the
second or the third operand must be (pc)
(for the case which
does not jump) and the other of the two must be a label_ref
(for the case which does jump). x may also be a mem
or
(plus:SI (pc)
y)
, where y may be a reg
or a
mem
; these unusual patterns are used to represent jumps through
branch tables.
If lval is neither (cc0)
nor (pc)
, the mode of
lval must not be VOIDmode
and the mode of x must be
valid for the mode of lval.
lval is customarily accessed with the SET_DEST
macro and
x with the SET_SRC
macro.
(return)
return
expression code is never used.
Inside an if_then_else
expression, represents the value to be
placed in pc
to return to the caller.
Note that an insn pattern of (return)
is logically equivalent to
(set (pc) (return))
, but the latter form is never used.
(call
function nargs)
mem
expression
whose address is the address of the function to be called.
nargs is an expression which can be used for two purposes: on
some machines it represents the number of bytes of stack argument; on
others, it represents the number of argument registers.
Each machine has a standard machine mode which function must
have. The machine description defines macro FUNCTION_MODE
to
expand into the requisite mode name. The purpose of this mode is to
specify what kind of addressing is allowed, on machines where the
allowed kinds of addressing depend on the machine mode being
addressed.
(clobber
x)
reg
,
scratch
, parallel
or mem
expression.
One place this is used is in string instructions that store standard values into particular hard registers. It may not be worth the trouble to describe the values that are stored, but it is essential to inform the compiler that the registers will be altered, lest it attempt to keep data in them across the string instruction.
If x is (mem:BLK (const_int 0))
or
(mem:BLK (scratch))
, it means that all memory
locations must be presumed clobbered. If x is a parallel
,
it has the same meaning as a parallel
in a set
expression.
Note that the machine description classifies certain hard registers as
“call-clobbered”. All function call instructions are assumed by
default to clobber these registers, so there is no need to use
clobber
expressions to indicate this fact. Also, each function
call is assumed to have the potential to alter any memory location,
unless the function is declared const
.
If the last group of expressions in a parallel
are each a
clobber
expression whose arguments are reg
or
match_scratch
(see RTL Template) expressions, the combiner
phase can add the appropriate clobber
expressions to an insn it
has constructed when doing so will cause a pattern to be matched.
This feature can be used, for example, on a machine that whose multiply and add instructions don't use an MQ register but which has an add-accumulate instruction that does clobber the MQ register. Similarly, a combined instruction might require a temporary register while the constituent instructions might not.
When a clobber
expression for a register appears inside a
parallel
with other side effects, the register allocator
guarantees that the register is unoccupied both before and after that
insn. However, the reload phase may allocate a register used for one of
the inputs unless the `&' constraint is specified for the selected
alternative (see Modifiers). You can clobber either a specific hard
register, a pseudo register, or a scratch
expression; in the
latter two cases, GCC will allocate a hard register that is available
there for use as a temporary.
For instructions that require a temporary register, you should use
scratch
instead of a pseudo-register because this will allow the
combiner phase to add the clobber
when required. You do this by
coding (clobber
(match_scratch
...)). If you do
clobber a pseudo register, use one which appears nowhere else—generate
a new one each time. Otherwise, you may confuse CSE.
There is one other known use for clobbering a pseudo register in a
parallel
: when one of the input operands of the insn is also
clobbered by the insn. In this case, using the same pseudo register in
the clobber and elsewhere in the insn produces the expected results.
(use
x)
reg
expression.
In some situations, it may be tempting to add a use
of a
register in a parallel
to describe a situation where the value
of a special register will modify the behavior of the instruction.
An hypothetical example might be a pattern for an addition that can
either wrap around or use saturating addition depending on the value
of a special control register:
(parallel [(set (reg:SI 2) (unspec:SI [(reg:SI 3) (reg:SI 4)] 0)) (use (reg:SI 1))])
This will not work, several of the optimizers only look at expressions
locally; it is very likely that if you have multiple insns with
identical inputs to the unspec
, they will be optimized away even
if register 1 changes in between.
This means that use
can only be used to describe
that the register is live. You should think twice before adding
use
statements, more often you will want to use unspec
instead. The use
RTX is most commonly useful to describe that
a fixed register is implicitly used in an insn. It is also safe to use
in patterns where the compiler knows for other reasons that the result
of the whole pattern is variable, such as `movmemm' or
`call' patterns.
During the reload phase, an insn that has a use
as pattern
can carry a reg_equal note. These use
insns will be deleted
before the reload phase exits.
During the delayed branch scheduling phase, x may be an insn.
This indicates that x previously was located at this place in the
code and its data dependencies need to be taken into account. These
use
insns will be deleted before the delayed branch scheduling
phase exits.
(parallel [
x0 x1 ...])
parallel
is a
vector of expressions. x0, x1 and so on are individual
side effect expressions—expressions of code set
, call
,
return
, clobber
or use
.
“In parallel” means that first all the values used in the individual side-effects are computed, and second all the actual side-effects are performed. For example,
(parallel [(set (reg:SI 1) (mem:SI (reg:SI 1))) (set (mem:SI (reg:SI 1)) (reg:SI 1))])
says unambiguously that the values of hard register 1 and the memory
location addressed by it are interchanged. In both places where
(reg:SI 1)
appears as a memory address it refers to the value
in register 1 before the execution of the insn.
It follows that it is incorrect to use parallel
and
expect the result of one set
to be available for the next one.
For example, people sometimes attempt to represent a jump-if-zero
instruction this way:
(parallel [(set (cc0) (reg:SI 34)) (set (pc) (if_then_else (eq (cc0) (const_int 0)) (label_ref ...) (pc)))])
But this is incorrect, because it says that the jump condition depends on the condition code value before this instruction, not on the new value that is set by this instruction.
Peephole optimization, which takes place together with final assembly
code output, can produce insns whose patterns consist of a parallel
whose elements are the operands needed to output the resulting
assembler code—often reg
, mem
or constant expressions.
This would not be well-formed RTL at any other stage in compilation,
but it is ok then because no further optimization remains to be done.
However, the definition of the macro NOTICE_UPDATE_CC
, if
any, must deal with such insns if you define any peephole optimizations.
(cond_exec [
cond expr])
(sequence [
insns ...])
insn
, jump_insn
, call_insn
,
code_label
, barrier
or note
.
A sequence
RTX is never placed in an actual insn during RTL
generation. It represents the sequence of insns that result from a
define_expand
before those insns are passed to
emit_insn
to insert them in the chain of insns. When actually
inserted, the individual sub-insns are separated out and the
sequence
is forgotten.
After delay-slot scheduling is completed, an insn and all the insns that
reside in its delay slots are grouped together into a sequence
.
The insn requiring the delay slot is the first insn in the vector;
subsequent insns are to be placed in the delay slot.
INSN_ANNULLED_BRANCH_P
is set on an insn in a delay slot to
indicate that a branch insn should be used that will conditionally annul
the effect of the insns in the delay slots. In such a case,
INSN_FROM_TARGET_P
indicates that the insn is from the target of
the branch and should be executed only if the branch is taken; otherwise
the insn should be executed only if the branch is not taken.
See Delay Slots.
These expression codes appear in place of a side effect, as the body of an insn, though strictly speaking they do not always describe side effects as such:
(asm_input
s)
(unspec [
operands ...]
index)
(unspec_volatile [
operands ...]
index)
unspec_volatile
is used for volatile operations and operations
that may trap; unspec
is used for other operations.
These codes may appear inside a pattern
of an
insn, inside a parallel
, or inside an expression.
(addr_vec:
m [
lr0 lr1 ...])
label_ref
expressions. The mode m specifies
how much space is given to each address; normally m would be
Pmode
.
(addr_diff_vec:
m base [
lr0 lr1 ...]
min max flags)
label_ref
expressions and so is base. The mode m specifies how much
space is given to each address-difference. min and max
are set up by branch shortening and hold a label with a minimum and a
maximum address, respectively. flags indicates the relative
position of base, min and max to the containing insn
and of min and max to base. See rtl.def for details.
(prefetch:
m addr rw locality)
This insn is used to minimize cache-miss latency by moving data into a cache before it is accessed. It should use only non-faulting data prefetch instructions.