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This is about eliminating the frame pointer and arg pointer.
This target hook should return
trueif a function must have and use a frame pointer. This target hook is called in the reload pass. If its return value istruethe function will have a frame pointer.This target hook can in principle examine the current function and decide according to the facts, but on most machines the constant
falseor the constanttruesuffices. Usefalsewhen the machine allows code to be generated with no frame pointer, and doing so saves some time or space. Usetruewhen there is no possible advantage to avoiding a frame pointer.In certain cases, the compiler does not know how to produce valid code without a frame pointer. The compiler recognizes those cases and automatically gives the function a frame pointer regardless of what
TARGET_FRAME_POINTER_REQUIREDreturns. You don't need to worry about them.In a function that does not require a frame pointer, the frame pointer register can be allocated for ordinary usage, unless you mark it as a fixed register. See
FIXED_REGISTERSfor more information.Default return value is
false.
A C statement to store in the variable depth-var the difference between the frame pointer and the stack pointer values immediately after the function prologue. The value would be computed from information such as the result of
get_frame_size ()and the tables of registersregs_ever_liveandcall_used_regs.If
ELIMINABLE_REGSis defined, this macro will be not be used and need not be defined. Otherwise, it must be defined even ifTARGET_FRAME_POINTER_REQUIREDalways returns true; in that case, you may set depth-var to anything.
If defined, this macro specifies a table of register pairs used to eliminate unneeded registers that point into the stack frame. If it is not defined, the only elimination attempted by the compiler is to replace references to the frame pointer with references to the stack pointer.
The definition of this macro is a list of structure initializations, each of which specifies an original and replacement register.
On some machines, the position of the argument pointer is not known until the compilation is completed. In such a case, a separate hard register must be used for the argument pointer. This register can be eliminated by replacing it with either the frame pointer or the argument pointer, depending on whether or not the frame pointer has been eliminated.
In this case, you might specify:
#define ELIMINABLE_REGS \ {{ARG_POINTER_REGNUM, STACK_POINTER_REGNUM}, \ {ARG_POINTER_REGNUM, FRAME_POINTER_REGNUM}, \ {FRAME_POINTER_REGNUM, STACK_POINTER_REGNUM}}Note that the elimination of the argument pointer with the stack pointer is specified first since that is the preferred elimination.
This target hook should returns
trueif the compiler is allowed to try to replace register number from_reg with register number to_reg. This target hook need only be defined ifELIMINABLE_REGSis defined, and will usually betrue, since most of the cases preventing register elimination are things that the compiler already knows about.Default return value is
true.